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Perennial Wall Rocket

Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (L.) DC.  (Fam: BRASSICACEAE.)
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  / Perennial Wall Rocket / Ġarġir isfar
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Morphology

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Visitors (Mar-2003):
Profile created on Mar-2003. / Last Update 29 Jun 2011.

Nomenclature

Species name:

Diplotaxis tenuifolia   (L.) DC.

Author(s):

Carl von Linné;
   Sweden, 1707-1778

Augustin Pyramus de Candolle;
   Switzerland, 1778-1841

Common names:

Perennial Wall Rocket, Sand Rocket, Slimleaf Wall Rocket

Maltese name:

Ġargir Isfar

Plant Family:

Brassicaceae   (Mustard (Cress) Family)

Name Derivation:

Diplotaxis = ? unknown
tenuifolia = Slender leaves (Latin)

Synonyms:

Brassica tenuifolius, Caulis tenuifolius, Eruca tenuifolia, Crucifera tenuifolia, Sinapis tenuifolius

Remarks:

-


Morphology

PLANT STRUCTURE:

Character

Growth Form

Branching

Surface

Description

Erect :

Upright, vertically straight up well clear off the ground.

Highly Branched :

Numerous branches and sub-branches are present but the common main stem is usually tall and well visible.

Glabrous :

Smooth; without any hairs, bristles or other projections.

General
Picture

Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)

LEAVES:

Character

Arrangement

Attachment

Venation

Description

Alternate :

Growing at different positions along the stem axis.

Stalked / Petiolate :

Hanging out by a slender leaf-stalk.

Single :

One central main vein (midrib) along leaf axis.

General
Picture

Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)
 

Character

Leaf Shape

Leaf Margin

Remarks

Description

Regular Opposite Lobes / Coarse Tooth :

Oppositely running deep leaf lobes (often tooth-shaped) along leaf axis. There is a large variation in the leaves amongst different specimens; some are deeply pinnate (having 2 pairs or 1 pair of large leaflets) while others could have very small or no leaflets at all.

Entire :

Smooth margin without indentations, lobes or any projections.

Odour

The leaves gives off a charateristic mild unpleasant smell. This is however a subjective observation as some eat it as salad.

General
Picture

Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)

FLOWERS:

Character

Colour

Basic Flower Type

No. of Petals

No. of Sepals

Description

Bright Yellow

Cruciform :

A flower with four petals at right angles to each other forming a shape of a cross.

4

4

General
Picture

  Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)
 

Character

Inflorescence

Description

Ovary

Stamens

Description

Raceme :

Simple, elongated, indeterminate cluster with stalked flowers.

The flower consists of 4 oval, non-overlapping yellow petals arranged diagonally to each other, 6 stamens and a central pistil with swollen stigma.

Superior :

Ovary situated above the flower parts (the calyx, corolla, and androecium). In other words, these are attached below the ovary.

6, Tetradynamous :

Having four long stamens (located centrally) and two shorter ones (located laterally).

General
Picture

Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)
 

Character

Scent

Average Flower Size

Pollen Colour

Other Notes

Description

None

The flowers do not have a particular scent or a very faint one.

16-18mm

Yellow

-


SEEDS:

Character

No. Per Fruit

Shape

Size

Colour

Description

32-60

Globular to ovoid

Spherical to oval shape with a small indentation.

1-2mm

Reddish brown to Dark Brown

General
Picture

Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)

FRUIT AND OTHER BOTANICAL DATA:

Character

Fruit Type

Colour of Fruit

Subterranean Parts

Other Notes

Description

Achenes without pappus :

A group of achenes which have no pappus for wind dispersal. Usually found closely-seated one beside each other on a common flat or dome-shaped receptacle.

Pale Green

Turns light brown when fully ripe.

Taproot :

A rooting system where there is the main descending root of a plant having a single dominant large structure from which a network of smaller and long roots emerge.

-

General
Picture

Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010) Wild Plants of the Mediterranean Islands of Malta  - Copyright Stephen Mifsud / Maltawildplants.com / Malta (2002-2010)

Specifications & Description

Life Cycle:

Perennial.

Growth Form:

HEMICRYPTOPHYTE (Creeping plants)

Habitat:

Fields, waysides, wasteland, piles of stones, besides or through walls.

Frequency:

Very Common

Localities in Malta:

Very Common throughout the Maltese Islands mostly in stony wasteland and waysides.

Plant Height:

40-100cm.

Flowering Period:

Oct - Jun

Protection in Malta:

Not Protected by Law (LN200/2011 or LN311/2006)

Red List 1989:

Not listed in the Flora section of the National Red Data Book (Lanfranco, 1989)

Poison:

Not Poisonous.

Diplotaxis tenuifolia is a perennial plant which almost flowers all year round, but it is mostly noticible in late September and October where there are very little flowers in the wild after the arid Summer. The stem is woody at its base, glabrous, forms branches with a dense numbers of leaves and with apical raceme inflorescences. The leaves are bluish to dark green mostly deep pinnate, fleshy, short stalked, and slender. Blade shape varies a lot from plant to plant. Usually there is 1 or 2 pairs of slender, long leaf lobes along the length of the narrow leaf blade. Upper cauline leaves are more lanceolate/linear and unlobed. All leaves are glabrous and usually have an entire outline, or possess small undeveloped leaf lobes (as if outline is serrated).

Flowers are sulphur yellow, normally 15-18mm across and are attached to the stem by a relatively long peduncle (2 - 3 times the length of the flower). The flowers are hermaphrodite (have both male and female organs) and are pollinated by insects. Flowers are made up of 4 sepals, 4 petals that are arranged diagonally forming the shape of a cross, 6 tetradynamous stamens,that is 4 central and long, 2 adjacent and shorter, and a central green pistil with an inflated pale green style.

Fruit are in the form of erect rod-shaped siliqua (25-35mm long x 2 mm across) which are slightly bulging with the seeds inside. The fruit pods have a short apical beak and are separated from the stalks by a distinct constriction. The fruit walls split open with a sudden twist and hence spread the seeds to a further distance away leaving a central translucent partition (called replum) along the length of the siliqua. The seeds are arranged in paired rows and attached at each side of the replum by tiny stalks called funiculi. There can be up to 60 seeds per fruit. They are spherical to ovoid in shape and brown to light brown in colour.


Information and Details


General Info

Plant with an unpleasant scent, but flowers are slightly sweet scented. This plant and the stinkweed are the only yellow-flowered Cruciferae to have an unpleasant smell when crushed. [275]

Edible Uses:

Leaves - raw. Used in salads, they are very strongly flavoured of cress [217] . The leaves have a hot flavour, very similar to rocket (Eruca vesicaria sativa) but more strongly flavoured - they make an excellent addition to a mixed salad but are too strong to be used in quantity on their own. The plant is very productive, producing leaves from early spring until the autumn. [KF]

Personal observations:

Dispersion
Dispersion of seeds is by sudden outwards twisting of the 2 outer walls (valves) forming the siliqua [SM]

Flowering season
One cannot really say the normal flowering period of this plant in Malta. There are flowers of the Diplotaxis tenuifolia in almost in all months of the year. Apparently, the seeds germinate into the plant soon after it rains, irrelevant of the temperature and season. In the middle of Summer there are less numbers but then after the showers in September, the plant regenarates and produces many flowers that blossom at the end of September or later in October. The plant rapidly grows and flowers up from the roots of older plants when water is available. Their flowers are readily noticed in October and November, because not many other flowers are in blossom at these months. They are independent plants, and rarely form carpets of yellow flowers.

Comparison with Brassica rapa subsp silvestris
In Malta there is another Cruciferae plant which is very similar to the Perennial wall rocket but it is less abundant and usually does not grow beside or from walls. This plant is called the Wild turnip (Brassica rapa ssp. silvestris) The perennial wall rocket can be easily mistaken for the Wild Turnip at first glance because the yellow flowers and slender fruit pods are very similar. The main differences are the leaves, size of plant, size of flower and sepals as indicated in the table below: [SM]

Feature Brassica rapa spp silvestris Diplotaxis tenuifolia
Leaves Large, ovoid, serrated, hairy and the young leaves have base lobes whic embrace stem Smaller, deeply dented, elongated, smooth, no embracing lobes
Sepals Few mm below flower, long, perpendicular to stem Small, cup shaped near to flower
Plant Size 40cm average 60-80cm average
Flower Size 13mm average slightly larger, 15mm average
Apical beak of seed pod Long Very short
Not much more information has been found about this plant either in books or on the internet. If you can supply further info to be included here please do not hesitate to email me. Full reference credits will be given.

Photo Gallery   (31 Images)

Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-01
Photo of the flower and some buds.
IMAGE: DTXTF-02
Photo (lateral view) of the flower showing the arrangement of the sepals, style with a green swollen stigma, and arrangement of the 6 stemens - 2 short and lateral; 4 central and longer. Sepals are not horizontally spread-out.
IMAGE: DTXTF-03
Photo of two flowers consisting of 4 bright yellow petals, 6 stamens and a central pistil with a pale green swollen stigma.
IMAGE: DTXTF-04
Close up photo of a flower in situ.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-05
Photo of two flowers. This plant does not form dense clusters of flowers, but usually 1 to 3 flowers per flowering stem.
IMAGE: DTXTF-06
Close up photo of flowers showing in detail the stamens and their yellow anthers and also the central style and its swollen stigma.
IMAGE: DTXTF-07
Close up photo of stalked flowers in the raceme type of inflorescences.
IMAGE: DTXTF-08
Scanned image of flower against a dark background. Petals are large and nearly circular in shape and usually they slightly overlap each other.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-09
Scanned image of a flower against a dark background. Note the typical arrangement of the stamens, 4 central and long, 2 lateral and short. The pistil has a green style and a swollen stigma.
IMAGE: DTXTF-10
Scanned and annotated image of a longitudinally dissected flower to show in detail the arrangement of the flower parts.
IMAGE: DTXTF-11
Scanned image of flower (lateral view). The light green sepals (x4) are not much spread out, and each has an oval cup-shaped structure.
IMAGE: DTXTF-12
Photo of basal stems and taproot. They are very tough, wood-like and thick. Taproot starts few cm below from where the branching stems unite into one main stem.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-13
Photo of a young plant in situ (top view) with its numerous slender leaves.
IMAGE: DTXTF-14
Photo of plant in situ with dark green leaves and numerous long racemes with clusters of bright yellow flowers.
IMAGE: DTXTF-15
Scanned image of a typical flowering stem having its inflorescence of a few flowers at the apex, followed by numerous seed pods (Siliqua) further down the stem.
IMAGE: DTXTF-16
Photo of the slender leaves with pairs of lateral lobes at their base.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-17
Scanned image of various leaf-forms of this species. It clearly shows the variation which exists in the shape of the leaves.
IMAGE: DTXTF-18
Scanned image of 4 typical leaves of different maturity. Length of adult leaf blade is approximately 10-12cm.
IMAGE: DTXTF-19
Scanned and enlarged image of a typical leaf blade. It is a slender linear to lanceolate leaf with one or two pairs of leaf lobes.
IMAGE: DTXTF-20
Scanned and annotated image of several siliqua at increasing (left to right) maturity levels.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-21
Scanned image of 4 ripe fruit pods. Note the short apical beak and the slightly bulging pod with the seeds inside.
IMAGE: DTXTF-22
Scanned image of a ripe siliqua, partially opened and liberating its seeds. Note the central internal partition to which seeds are attached to.
IMAGE: DTXTF-23
Scanned image of an empty fruit pod, where its fruit walls have dropped off and the seeds dispersed, hence leaving this characteristic translucent central partition.
IMAGE: DTXTF-24
Scanned image of the seeds. About 40-60 per seed-pod.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO
IMAGE: DTXTF-25
Scanned and enlarged image of the seeds. More or less oval in shape with a small indentation at one end.
IMAGE: DTXTF-26
Scanned and enlarged image of the seeds. They can be light brown to dark brown in colour.
IMAGE: DTXTF-27
Scanned image of the nearly circular petals.
IMAGE: DTXTF-28
Photo of a young plant.
Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO Diplotaxis tenuifolia  (Perennial Wall Rocket) - CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO  
IMAGE: DTXTF-29
Magnified image of pollen under light microscope. They have an oval shape, a pitted texture and longitudinal grooves.
IMAGE: DTXTF-30
Close up photo of the seed pods (called siliqua) in situ. They are usually green, have a short beak and constrictions around their seeds packed inside.
IMAGE: DTXTF-31
Photo of a siliqua that has just split open leaving the translucent central partition and some seeds towards the tip, still attached to the seed pod by tiny stalk-like structures called funiculi.
IMAGE: DTXTF-32

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