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madrone, madroña, madroño

Arizona madrone

Habit Shrubs or trees, sometimes with swollen burl-like base (capable of resprouting after fire); bark red or reddish brown, exfoliating in flakes on young axes, retained on oldest portions of trunk and abaxial side of major limbs where forming an irregular checked pattern, or bark at first flaking on young branchlets then retained, eventually uniformly checkered over all main axes (A. arizonica). Trees, 3–8[–10] m; bark light gray to reddish gray, checkered with squarish to rectangular segments or plates, 1–4 × 1–2.5 cm, retained on bole and major limbs; twigs 3+ years old with brick-red outer bark exfoliating in flakes or, sometimes, in slender strips.
Stems

erect, branching;

young branchlets glandular-hairy, thinly tomentose, or both, or glabrous;

new growth of rapidly elongating sprouts usually with glandular hairs; (buds ovate, apex acute, glossy red, sometimes glabrate, usually only terminal buds well developed and conspicuous; bud scales accrescent, 8–16, imbricate).

Leaves

bifacial or isofacial;

blade ovate (widest slightly proximal to middle) or elliptic, coriaceous, margins entire or finely to coarsely toothed on sprouts and sterile shoots, plane, surfaces ± glabrous.

larger on sterile shoots with longer internodes;

petiole (often red), (1–)1.7–3.2(–4.2) cm, base slightly decurrent, glabrous;

blade slightly lighter green abaxially, olive-green and glossy adaxially, ovate, (2.5–)3–7.5(–9) × (1–)1.8–3(–4) cm, base usually tapered-acute, rarely slightly rounded [broader and more nearly ovate-lanceolate], apex usually acute, sometimes slightly acuminate, surfaces glabrous.

Inflorescences

clusters of racemes, 10–40-flowered.

often congested;

axes densely hairy, hairs sometimes glandular.

Pedicels

accrescent, obliquely erect or slightly pendulous, 2.4–5 mm (to 16 mm in fruit), densely hairy, hairs sometimes glandular;

bract clasping base, reddish, scalelike, 1.4–2 mm.

Flowers

bisexual;

sepals persistent, 5, connate basally, ovate to deltate;

petals 5, connate nearly their entire lengths, creamy white [yellowish], corolla urceolate, (soon developing post-anthesis circumferential dimple near mid length, base inflated);

stamens 10, included, (distinct);

filaments slender distally, abruptly expanded proximally into swollen base, (villous proximally);

anthers with 2 dorsal awns adaxially, dehiscent by subterminal, elliptic pores;

ovary 5-locular;

stigma capitate.

calyx pale green, lobes 1.1–1.5 mm (mostly hidden beneath corolla), apex obtuse or rounded;

corolla 5–5.6 mm;

anthers 1.3–1.5 mm, spurs 1/2–2/3 times length of thecae, (finely tuberculate);

ovary with (2–)3–5+ ovules per locule.

Berries

orange-red, red, or blackish red, ± globose or slightly turbinate, juicy, roughened-tuberculate, glabrous or thinly hairy;

pyrenes 1–5, not connate into stone.

blackish red, 6.5–9 mm diam.

Seeds

1–5, distinct, (irregularly angled).

ca. 2 mm.

x

= 13.

Arbutus

Arbutus arizonica

Phenology Flowering May–Jun(-Aug); fruiting Aug–Oct.
Habitat Riverine forests and oak parklands along seasonally moist waterways
Elevation 1500-2400 m (4900-7900 ft)
Distribution
from USDA
w North America; Mexico; Central America; sw North America; s Europe; w Europe; n Africa; n Atlantic Islands (Canary Islands)
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AZ; NM; Mexico (Chihuahua, Durango, Jalisco, Sinaloa, Sonora, Zacatecas)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Unedo Hoffmansegg & Link

Species 10 (3 in the flora).

Five species of Arbutus occur in the Neotropics, and all extend north of the Tropic of Cancer. In the Tropics, the plants are found primarily in montane areas associating with Pinus and Quercus species. Populations north of Mexico inhabit riverine woodlands (A. arizonica) or progressively drier environments, associating with pinyon-juniper vegetation (A. xalapensis) in Texas and New Mexico, and dry wooded slopes and canyons (A. menziesii) in California, Oregon, and southwestern Washington, increasingly moist but well-drained habitats in northwestern Washington, islands of Puget Sound and San Juan Archipelago, and southwestern British Columbia.

Species of Arbutus are easily confused with some members of the genus Comarostaphylis because of the exfoliating bark and berrylike fruit common to both. The fruit alone distinguishes them: Arbutus species produce a true berry with multiple locules and seeds, whereas Comarostaphylis species produce a drupe with one central stone enclosing a single seed. Taxonomically, the Arbutus species of the Old World and New World are included in a single genus. A. P. de Candolle (1839) perceived a morphological distinction between the two geographic groups. He maintained a single genus and established two subgenera that he named Gerontogeae (sect. Arbutus) for the Old World taxa and Americanae for those of the New World. L. C. Hileman et al. (2001) presented corroborative molecular data suggesting that the two geographic groups represent separate lineages.

Arbutus unedo is cultivated as an ornamental tree in California, where it flowers and fruits. It is reported to succeed in the USDA hardiness zones 8–10, extending along the Pacific Coast from southwestern Oregon into the region north of Los Angeles, California. It grows also in all of coastal Washington and southwestern British Columbia.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Two outstanding features of Arbutus arizonica distinguish it in the field: 1) the consistently narrow, glossy leaves with tapered leaf bases, and 2) the nonexfoliating bark that acquires a checkered appearance within a few years. Trees with the narrowest leaves overall and the most narrowly tapered bases occur in the populations in the extreme northern part of the range in Cochise, Graham, Pima, and Santa Cruz counties of southeastern Arizona and Hidalgo County in southwestern New Mexico.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Key
1. Leaf blades usually tapered-acute at base, rarely rounded; bark light gray to reddish gray, checkered with squarish to rectangular segments or plates, 1-4 × 1-2.5 cm, retained on bole and major limbs; twigs 3+ years old with brick-red outer bark exfoliating in flakes or, sometimes, in slender strips.
A. arizonica
1. Leaf blades usually rounded or subcordate at base, sometimes tapered; bark on young twigs exfoliating in irregular strips, exfoliating on larger limbs and bole in flakes and sheets, older bark retained only at base of tree or on abaxial sides of larger limbs
→ 2
2. Plants 4-10(-20) m; leaf blades 6.5-13 × 3.5-6(-8) cm, glaucous-green abaxially; western coast of North America.
A. menziesii
2. Plants 2-4(-8) m; leaf blades (2.5-)4-6(-7.5) × (1.2-)1.8-3(-4) cm, green or slightly lighter green abaxially; New Mexico, Texas
A. xalapensis
Source FNA vol. 8, p. 398. Author: Paul D. Sørensen. FNA vol. 8, p. 399.
Parent taxa Ericaceae > subfam. Arbutoideae Ericaceae > subfam. Arbutoideae > Arbutus
Sibling taxa
A. menziesii, A. xalapensis
Subordinate taxa
A. arizonica, A. menziesii, A. xalapensis
Synonyms A. xalapensis var. arizonica
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 395. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 187. 1754 , (A. Gray) Sargent: Gard. & Forest 4: 317. (1891)
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