Chaenomeles |
Chaenomeles japonica |
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flowering quince, quince |
Japanese flowering-quince, maule's quince |
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Habit | Shrubs [or trees], (0.2–)10–20 dm. | Shrubs, 0.2–10 dm. | ||||
Stems | few to many, erect or spreading; bark purplish brown, blackish brown, purplish black, or purple, with scattered pale brown lenticels; long and short shoots present; thorns present; glabrous or hairy young, smooth older; buds triangular-ovoid, apex obtuse or acute, scale margins glabrous or hairy. |
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Branches | purple, scabrous (and tomentose when young, becoming blackish brown, verrucose, glabrous with age). |
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Leaves | deciduous or semipersistent, cauline, simple; stipules persistent, free, reniform or suborbiculate, rarely ovate, leaflike, margins serrate or crenate-serrate; petiole present; blade spatulate, obovate, elliptic, or ovate, 3–9 cm, firm or leathery, margins flat, serrate or crenate-serrate, venation pinnate, surfaces glabrous, sometimes midvein abaxially. |
stipules of vegetative branches reniform, to 1 cm, margins crenate-serrate, apex usually obtuse; petiole 4–6 mm; blade obovate, spatulate, or broadly ovate, 3–5 × 2–3 cm, base cuneate to broadly cuneate, margins crenate-serrate, apex obtuse to acute, abaxial surface glabrous. |
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Inflorescences | terminal on short branches, appearing lateral on branch as a whole, [2 or]3–5[–10]-flowered, fascicles, glabrous or hairy; bracts present or absent; bracteoles present or absent. |
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Pedicels | present, short, or absent. |
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Flowers | opening before or with leaves, perianth and androecium epigynous, 25–50 mm diam.; hypanthium campanulate, ± constricted at mouth, 4–7 mm diam., exterior glabrous; sepals 5, reflexed or ascending, suborbiculate or ovate, abaxial surface glabrous, adaxial hairy; petals 5, white, pink, or red, obovate or ovate to suborbiculate, base short-clawed, apex rounded; stamens 40–60, equal to or 1/2 length petals; carpels 5, connate, adnate to hypanthium, indumentum not recorded, styles 2–5, terminal, basally connate 1/3 of length, nearly equal to stamens; ovules 2. |
25–40 mm diam.; sepals ovate, rarely suborbiculate, 4–5 mm; petals dark red, obovate or suborbiculate, 15–25 mm; stamens 40–60, 1/2 length of petals. |
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Fruits | pomes, sessile, yellow or yellowish green, globose, subglobose, or ovoid, 23–60 mm diam., 5-locular, glabrous; fleshy; hypanthium persistent; sepals deciduous; carpels cartilaginous; styles deciduous. |
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Pomes | yellow, subglobose, 23–40 mm diam. |
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Seeds | 10 per locule. |
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x | = 17. |
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Chaenomeles |
Chaenomeles japonica |
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Phenology | Flowering Apr–May; fruiting Aug–Oct. | |||||
Habitat | Vacant lots, old fields, fencerows, wastelands | |||||
Elevation | 10–600 m (0–2000 ft) | |||||
Distribution |
Europe; Asia (China, Japan) [Introduced in North America] |
IL; MS; NY; PA; VT; WV; e Asia (Japan) [Introduced in North America; introduced also in Europe] |
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Discussion | Species 4 (2 in the flora). The flowering quinces are widely cultivated as ornamental shrubs for their attractive and abundant pink, red, or white flowers. Other species differ from those in the flora area in their entire leaf margins and tomentose leaves. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Chaenomeles japonica is cultivated as an ornamental for its showy spring flowers. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
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Key |
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Source | FNA vol. 9, p. 484. | FNA vol. 9, p. 485. | ||||
Parent taxa | ||||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||
Subordinate taxa | ||||||
Synonyms | Pyrus japonica, Cydonia japonica | |||||
Name authority | Lindley: Trans. Linn. Soc. London 13: 97. (1821) | (Thunberg) Lindley ex Spach: Hist. Nat. Vég. 2: 159. (1834) | ||||
Web links |