The taxonomy of the genus
Draba is extraordinarily complex, particularly for
Draba verna, which is sometimes treated as a whole genus (
Erophila DC.) in its own right, with a number of different species and varieties listed under various treatments. The reason for this is that
D. verna reproduces almost entirely by inbreeding (the flowers pollinating themselves immediately on opening), so a large number of genetically similar lines can be recognised. These lines can even have different chromosome numbers (or ploidy levels), making them less compatible with other plants even when cross-pollination does occur. A full list of synonyms, subspecies and varieties is given in the Brassicaceae Species Checklist. The account here is for
Draba verna L. in its original, aggregate, sense, although
D. praecox and
D. majuscula can be viewed as separate species. The common name "whitlowgrass" refers to an old meaning of the word, which
Aulus Cornelius Celsus described as "a small piece of flesh [which] sometimes grows out from the nail, causing great pain; the Greeks call it pterygium." The leaves of whitlowgrass sometimes have a single forward-pointing tooth on one side, thus resembling this condition. The "grass" part of the name simply means "plant" and does not imply that it is in the botanical
grasses family. Other common names for it include "spring draba", "shadflower", "nailwort", "vernal whitlow grass" and "early whitlow grass". ==Identification==