The native distribution of tower mustard is moderately uncertain with sources having some details of its range different. POWO lists it as native to all parts of Europe with the exceptions of Ireland, Sardinia, and Corsica. They list it as growing in much of the northwest of
Temperate Asia from Turkey and Iran northwards into central Asia and from
Chita Oblast,
Irkutsk Oblast, and
Krasnoyarsk Krai westwards in
Siberia. In the more southerly parts of Asia POWO lists it as native to Korea, Japan,
Mongolia,
Manchuria, north-central China, southeast China,
Xinjiang,
Nepal, and the western
Himalayas. In addition they list it as introduced to
Primorsky Krai,
Sakhalin Island, and the
Kuril Islands. In Africa POWO lists it as native to
Algeria,
Kenya,
Morocco,
Rwanda,
Tanzania,
Uganda, and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, with it being introduced to
Lesotho and two parts of South Africa,
KwaZulu-Natal, the
Cape Provinces, and the
Northern Provinces. In North America POWO lists it as native to all parts of Canada with the exceptions of
Newfoundland and Labrador,
Nova Scotia,
Prince Edward Island, and
Nunavut. It is also listed as native to all of the western United States, the north-central US from
Missouri and
Nebraska northwards, the northeastern US with the exception of
Vermont, where they list it as introduced, and in the southeastern US states of Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia.
NatureServe disagrees with some of these, not listing it as present in Maryland, present but not evaluated in Vermont, additionally introduced to Kansas, not native to Montana, and also present and evaluated in Georgia. They also do not list it as present in the
Northwest Territories of Canada. Finally Plants of the World Online lists it as introduced to the Australian states of
New South Wales and
Victoria. It is classified as an
endangered species in the UK and is considered to be facing a very high risk of extinction in the wild. It is listed as a Priority Species under the UK
Biodiversity Action Plan. Only 35 sites are recorded by
Plantlife mostly in
Norfolk, (where 100 plants were found at a new site in 1999) but includes 6 sites near
Kidderminster in
Worcestershire. ==References==