Duration: Annual Nativity: Native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Tall glabrous annual herb with branching stems 60-100(200)cm tall; leaves with 5 (sometimes 7) palmately compound leaflets; petals gold. Leaves: With 5 (sometimes 7) palmately compound leaflets, glabrous; lower leaf petioles longer than upper leaf petioles which can be sessile; leaflets oblong to oblanceolate, 2-5 cm long, entire. Flowers: Racemes elongate in fruit, rather persistent sepals united below; petals golden, 4-7 mm long; filaments 10-15 mm long.p Fruits: Capsules 1-4 cm long on stipes 10-20 mm long; seeds nearly round and yellowish, 2 mm long. Ecology: Mostly along streams from 2,000-7,000 ft (600-2130 m); flowers May-August. Notes: Characterized by being a tall (1-2m) annual with 5-7 palmately compound, entire leaflets and a raceme of golden flowers. P. lutea is similar but shorter (<0.5m) and has yellow petals. Ethnobotany: Navajo used with tobacco in some chants. Plant also used for insect bites. Capers can also be gathered to eat. Etymology: Cleome is early European name for mustard-like plant. Lutea means yellow, from a source of yellow dye called lutum. Synonyms: Cleome jonesii (J.F. Macbr.) Tidestr., Cleome lutea var. jonesii Editor: SBuckley 2010, FCoburn 2022