African Mustard is a nearly erect annual herb
covered with branched hairs. Basal leaves soon wither away, stem leaves
are elliptic-oblong to oblanceolate, 2-6 cm long, entire or dentate,
petiolate, uppermost smaller and nearly stalkless. Flowers are pink or
purple, rarely white on barely up to 3 mm long stalks thickened in
fruit, forming an elonated raceme with straight or zigzag axis. Petals
are 6-10 mm long; seed-pods linear, 4-angled, covered with branched
trichomes. African Mustard is native to S. Europe, N. Africa, most of
Asia, and China. It is locally common in Kashmir in dry wastelands,
weed of cultivation.
Identification credit: Gurcharan Singh
Photographed in Srinagar, Kashmir.
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The flower labeled African Mustard is ...