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  1. Lepidium - Wikipedia

    The genus name Lepidium is from Greek meaning 'small scale', which is thought to be derived from a folk medicine usage of the plant to treat leprosy, which cause small scales on the skin.

  2. Lepidium Growing Guide - Farmer Bailey Inc.

    This guide is derived and condensed from Danziger's Lepidium Cultivation Guide. We highly recommend reading it in its entirety, as it contains essential growing information.

  3. The genus Lepidium L. (Brassicaceae): A comprehensive review of …

    Dec 1, 2024 · This review aimed to provide comprehensive information about the botanical characteristics, traditional uses, pharmacology, phytochemistry and toxicology of Lepidium, to …

  4. Description, Genus, Cress, Uses, & Facts - Britannica

    peppergrass, (genus Lepidium), genus of some 230 species of herbs of the mustard family (Brassicaceae). Peppergrass species are distributed throughout the world, and many are common …

  5. Lepidium L. | Plants of the World Online | Kew Science

    First published in Sp. Pl.: 643 (1753) The native range of this genus is Cosmopolitan.

  6. Lepidium - Burke Herbarium Image Collection

    Habitat: Beach strand, grassy balds, grasslands, and other open areas at low elevations. The WTU Image Collection provides a comprehensive online collection of photographs and information for the …

  7. 2013 BONAP North American Plant Atlas. TaxonMaps

    Dec 15, 2014 · 2013 BONAP North American Plant Atlas. TaxonMaps.

  8. Genus: Lepidium (pepperweed): Go Botany

    The Go Botany project is supported in part by the National Science Foundation.

  9. Lepidium - biodiversityexplorer.info

    About 150 species, widely distributed in temperate and subtropical regions of the world, with 16 native and two naturalised species in southern Africa. One of the latter, Lepidium draba (Pepper-cress, …

  10. Lepidium in Flora of North America @ efloras.org

    Plants not scapose; glabrous, pubescent, hirsute, or pilose. Stems usually erect or ascending, sometimes procumbent, decumbent, or prostrate, unbranched or branched.