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Sinapis alba is probably the plant more widely known as yellow mustard.
Leptidea sinapis is one of three species in a cryptic species complex.
Despite their similar common names, black mustard and white mustard (genus Sinapis) are not closely related.
Its main foods are sinapis, isatis, athionema, iberis and biscutella species.
These plants belong to the genera Brassica or Sinapis.
Butterfly Conservation Ireland Summary of the sinapis cryptic species complex.
Bulbophyllum sinapis is a species of orchid in the genus Bulbophyllum.
Mustard plant are any of several plant species in the genera Brassica and Sinapis.
Sinalbin is a glucosinolate found in the seeds of white mustard, Sinapis alba, and in many wild plant species.
The Wood White (Leptidea sinapis), is a butterfly of the Pieridae family.
There he distilled a very popular Aqua Sinapis ("water of mustard", perhaps a reference to his own name) whose sale made him a wealthy man.
Sinapis alba (I)
The larva feeds on Cruciferae, Iberis sempervivum and Sinapis.
Leptidea sinapis (Wood White)
Seeds of white mustard, Sinapis alba, will give a much less pungent mustard because this species contains a different glucosinolate, sinalbin.
X-ray crystallography of myrosinase isolated from Sinapis alba revealed the two subunits were linked by a zinc atom.
The latinized name is a translation of his family name, which means "mustard" in Czech ("sinapis" in Latin).
In Ireland, where it was only positively identified in 2001, it is commoner and far more widespread than the Wood White L. sinapis.
The specific epithet sinapivelus is derived from the Latin words sinapis (mustard) and velus (veil) and refers to the mustard-coloured veil.
It causes downy mildew of species of Brassica, Raphanus, Sinapis and probably other genera within the Brassicaceae.
They mixed unfermented grape juice, known as "must", with ground mustard seeds (called sinapis) to make "burning must", mustum ardens - hence "must ard".
The larvae feed on Descourainia sophia, Sisymbrium, Sinapis (including Sinapis arvensis) and Isatis (including Isatis tinctoria) species.
Its caterpillars can be a pest on cultivated cabbages, but it will lay eggs as well on wild members of the cabbage family such as Charlock Sinapis arvensis and Hedge Mustard Sisybrium officinale.
Mustard (or yellow sauce) is a condiment made from the seeds of a mustard plant (white or yellow mustard, Sinapis hirta; brown or Indian mustard, Brassica juncea; or black mustard, B. nigra).
The word fünf "five" is the only genuinely German word with this ending, the others are early loanwords, including Hanf "hemp" (from kánnabis) and Senf "mustard" (from sinapis), and the toponym Genf "Geneva", from Genava.