Duration: Perennial Nativity: Native Lifeform: Subshrub General: Herbaceous perennials, to 75 cm tall, stems erect to ascending, diffusely branched above, herbage soft-canescent with many branched, tree-like hairs, plants with a more or less woody base. Leaves: Alternate, oblanceolate to obovate, 1.5-11.5 cm long, the bases tapered, margins deeply sinuately lobed to coarsely dentate or pinnatifid, surfaces densely hairy, the proximal and middle cauline blades petioled, petioles to 1 cm long, distal blades sessile, basal leaves absent on older plants. Flowers: Bright white, with 4 petals forming a cross, bisexual, the petals oblanceolate to spoon-shaped (spatulate), 3.5-6 mm long and 1-1.5 mm wide, the claws distinctly differentiated from the blades and 0.5-1 mm long, sepals 4, erect to slightly spreading, 2-4 mm long, the bases not sac-like, stamens generally 6 with 4 long and 2 short, filaments spreading, 2.2-3 mm long and longer than the petals, anthers 0.3-0.5 mm long, ovary solitary, superior, generally 2-chambered with a septum connecting the 2 parietal placentas, style solitary, stigmas entire or 2-lobed, the racemes of the inflorescences becoming slightly to considerably elongated in fruit. Fruits: Siliques, cylindric to terete, very slender, 1-2.6 cm long and to 1 mm wide, unsegmented but constricted between the seeds, the valves densely hairy, styles 1-2.2 mm long, pedicels spreading, 3-12 mm long, densely hairy, flat parallel or perpendicular to Ecology: Found on limestone cliffs, steep rock outcrops, shaded talus, ravines, granite outcrops, rock crevices, bluffs, steep canyons, limestone slopes, igneous slopes, oak-juniper communities, and in sagebrush-juniper areas, from 4,000-8,500 ft (1219-2591 m); fl Distribution: Arizona, California, New Mexico, Texas; Mexico. Notes: This species is included in Transberingia in Jepson 2012. Ethnobotany: Unknown, but other species in the genus have uses. Synonyms: None Editor: LCrumbacher2012