Radd Icenoggle
March 19, 2023
Physaria is a genus of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae (mustards). Many species are known generally as twinpods, bladderpods, or lesquerella. They are native to the Americas, with many species endemic to western North America. They are densely hairy annual and perennial herbs often growing prostrate or decumbent, along the ground in patches or clumps. They bear inflorescences of bright yellow flowers. The fruit is often notched deeply, dividing into twin sections, giving the genus its common name of twinpod.
Physaria humilis (originally known as Lesguerella humilis) was formerly described as a species in 1984 by Dr. Reed Rollins. It was first discovered on St. Joseph Peak in the Bitterroot Range in 1966, by Klaus H. Lackschewitz and Tor Fageraas. This first specimen, and other early collections, were variously labeled as Lesguerella alpina, Physaria didvmocarpa, or P. geveri, but Rollins ultimately determined that they represented a previously undescribed species. The type specimen was collected in 1983 by Reed C. and Kathryn W. Rollins, with Lackschewitz, Peter Lesica, and Aileen G. Roads, near the summit of St. Mary Peak, also in the Bitterroot Range.