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desert mountain-mahogany, eastern mountain-mahogany, hairy mountain-mahogany

Habit Shrubs, (5–)10–30(–60) dm, sparsely to moderately branched.
Stems

long-shoot internodes (3–)7–20(–37) mm, sericeous, pilose-hirsute or villous, glabrate; short shoots 5–60(–140) × 1.5–2.5 mm.

Leaves

persistent or drought-deciduous;

stipules 1.5–2.5(–3) mm;

petiole (1–)2–5(-9) mm;

blade narrowly oblanceolate, oblong-oblanceolate, oblong-elliptic, narrowly obovate to obovate, sometimes ovate, (3–)7–35(–52) × (1.3–)4–15(–28) mm, coriaceous to subcoriaceous, base narrowly to broadly cuneate, margins serrulate to crenate in distal 1/2–1/3, teeth acute-apiculate, antrorse or proximal divergent in large leaves, or smaller blades entire, apex rounded to apiculate, abaxial surface sericeous, villous, or hirsute on veins, areoles canescent, rarely glabrous, adaxial moderately sericeous, hirsute, or villous.

Flowers

1–3(–7) per short shoot;

hypanthial tubes sericeous, hirsute-pilose to villous;

hypanthial cups 1.5–2.5 × 2.5–4 mm;

sepals 5, narrowly deltate, 1–2 mm, acute;

stamens (15–)20–40, anthers 0.6–1.2 mm, hirsute.

Achenes

6–9(–10.7) × 1.3–2 mm; fruiting pedicels (1–)2–5(–11.3) mm;

hypanthial tubes (4–)6–9(–10.2) mm;

pedicel/tube ratio (18–)30–50(–135)%;

fruit awns (2.5–)3.5–5(–7.2) cm, proximal setae 1.5–2.7 mm.

Cercocarpus breviflorus

Phenology Flowering late Jun–Aug(–Sep).
Habitat Yellow pine, fir forests, pinyon, juniper, oak woodlands, chaparral, grasslands, desert mountains, rocky, limestone, sandstone or rhyolite substrates
Elevation 1500–2600 m (4900–8500 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AZ; NM; TX; Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Hidalgo, Nuevo León, Querétaro, San Luis Potosí, Sonora, Tamaulipas, Zacatecas)
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Discussion

Cercocarpus breviflorus grows in the mountains of north-central Arizona, south-central New Mexico, and central and trans-Pecos Texas and in Mexico, over a 2000 km range. It has smaller flowers and shorter fruiting pedicels, hypanthial tubes, and stipules than C. betuloides. Flowering occurs after summer rains, providing reproductive isolation from C. betuloides.

In the mountains from east-central Arizona into north-central New Mexico, about 70–80% of plants of Cercocarpus breviflorus have pilose-hirsute to villous vestiture, and leaves tend to be thinner and more obovate with five to seven teeth in the rounded apical margins. In more arid montane regions of southern New Mexico, trans-Pecos Texas, and Mexico, leaves are more commonly sericeous (70%), often smaller, more coriaceous, with fewer teeth, in extreme being entire with a single terminal tooth. In strongly arid conditions, plants are smaller, more intricately branched, and thorny. These differences appear suitable for taxonomic recognition; a broad zone of intergradation occurs in southeastern Arizona and south-central New Mexico.

In the Big Bend region and Hill County of Texas and in the Chihuahuan Desert and mountains of eastern Mexico, plants of Cercocarpus breviflorus in more mesic chaparral habitats on north-facing slopes and drainages are taller with larger, sericeous, toothed leaves, often with the proximal teeth divergent. These plants blend completely into smaller-leaved plants in more arid sites on the same mountains. As in the C. betuloides complex, there are also plants with glabrous abaxial areoles.

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

Source FNA vol. 9, p. 335.
Parent taxa Rosaceae > subfam. Dryadoideae > tribe Dryadeae > Cercocarpus
Sibling taxa
C. betuloides, C. ledifolius, C. montanus
Synonyms C. breviflorus var. eximius, C. eximius, C. montanus var. paucidentatus, C. parvifolius var. paucidentatus
Name authority A. Gray: Smithsonian Contr. Knowl. 5(6): 54. (1853)
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