Stanleya pinnata


Stanleya pinnata is a species of flowering plant in the family Brassicaceae known as desert prince's-plume. It is a perennial herb or shrub native to North America.

Distribution

The plant is native to the western Great Plains and western North America. It occurs in many types of open habitat, including deserts, chaparral, foothills, rocky cliffs, sagebrush, and prairie. It prefers alkali- and gypsum-rich soils.

Description

Stanleya pinnata is a perennial herb or shrub producing several erect stems reaching up to about in maximum height. The stems are unbranched, hairless, often waxy in texture, and have woody bases. The leaves have fleshy blades up to long by wide which are divided into several long, narrow lobes. The blades are borne on petioles.
The top of the stem is occupied by a long inflorescence which is a dense raceme of many flowers. Each flower has four narrow yellowish sepals which open to reveal four bright yellow petals each up to long. The stamens protruding from the flower's center may approach 3 cm in length.
The fruit is a curving, wormlike silique up to long.

Uses

It has been used as a Indigenous [peoples of the Americas|Native American] traditional medicinal plant and food source, including by the Hopi, Zuni, Paiute, Navajo, Kawaiisu, and Tewa peoples.

Ecology

It is a larval host to both Becker's white and checkered white caterpillars.
Some of the plant's amino acids use selenium from the soil in place of sulfur, making it highly toxic to animals.