Crataegus berberifolia |
Crataegus ashei |
|||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
barberry hawthorn, barberry-leaf hawthorn |
Ashe hawthorn |
|||||
Habit | Shrubs or trees, 60 dm. | Shrubs, 30–50 dm. | ||||
Stems | twigs: new growth orange-brown or green tinged with red, ± pubescent, 1-year old brown, older gray; thorns on twigs ± straight or recurved, 2-years old shiny black to chestnut brown, fine or stouter, (2–)3–4(–6.5) cm. |
twigs: new growth densely pubescent, 1-year old tan to chestnut, ± shiny, older gray; thorns on twigs few to numerous, 2-years old shiny, very dark brown to black, ± slender, 2–3 cm. |
||||
Leaves | petiole 4–6 mm, length 13–18% blade, glabrescent, eglandular; blade narrowly obovate to oblanceolate, (2.5–)3(–4) cm, coriaceous, base narrowly cuneate, lobes 0, margins finely crenate or serrate except at base, or only beyond widest part, venation craspedodromous, veins 4–6 per side, apex subacute to obtuse, lustrous, abaxial surface ± densely pilose on veins, sometimes pubescent on surface, adaxial hairy young, glabrescent or becoming scabrous. |
petiole length 25% blade, densely pubescent, stipitate-glandular; blade mid green, elliptic to narrowly obovate, 3–6 cm, base cuneate, lobes 0 or obscure, margins glandular-serrate, teeth to 1.5 mm, proximal teeth stipitate-glandular, veins 5–7 per side, apex acute to subacute, abaxial surface sparsely pubescent or glabrous, veins hairy, adaxial shiny, scabrous. |
||||
Inflorescences | 8–12-flowered; branches densely pubescent; bracteoles linear, margins glandular. |
3–10-flowered, arising proleptically (subterminal on perennial short shoots); branches densely villous; bracteoles caducous, linear, 4–8 mm, herbaceous to membranous, margins stipitate-glandular. |
||||
Flowers | 10–20 mm diam.; hypanthium villous or glabrous; sepals 3–5 mm, margins entire, abaxially glabrous; stamens 10 or 20, anthers cream or pink; styles 2 or 3. |
(15–)20–23 mm diam.; hypanthium tomentose; sepals narrowly triangular, 6–7 mm, margins glandular-pectinate, abaxially pilose; stamens 20(–25), anthers cream, sometimes pink; styles 3(–5) (with bristly hairs at bases). |
||||
Pomes | reddish to yellow, suborbicular, 8–10 mm diam., glabrous; sepals erose or patent; pyrenes 2 or 3. |
orange-red to deep red, 10–14 mm diam., densely short-pubescent; sepals patent-incurved; pyrenes 3(–5). |
||||
2n | = 68. |
|||||
Crataegus berberifolia |
Crataegus ashei |
|||||
Phenology | Flowering Apr; fruiting Sep–Nov. | |||||
Habitat | Brush, open woodlands | |||||
Elevation | 0–300 m (0–1000 ft) | |||||
Distribution |
AL; AR; FL; GA; KS; LA; MO; MS; NC; SC; TN
|
AL; LA; MS; TN |
||||
Discussion | Varieties 2 (2 in the flora). Crataegus berberifolia is widespread from Texas to Missouri, Florida, and Virginia; it is particularly abundant in Louisiana. Crataegus berberifolia is little differentiated from some forms of C. crus-galli, except in indumentum; it has relatively small and less variably shaped leaves. Its distribution is quite different. Intermediates with hairy leaves and glabrous inflorescences or nearly glabrous leaves and hairy inflorescences may represent hybrids with C. crus-galli (where they might be reached in the key). Such a situation is found in C. araioclada. Abrasion of the adaxial leaf pubescence may occur, rendering identification more difficult with fruiting material. Crataegus berberifolia has a plethora of yellow and orange-fruited forms, particularly from southern Louisiana. Crataegus fera and C. tersa are red-fruited, C. crocina yellow. The fruit color in the type is unknown; E. J. Palmer (in specimen annotation) called it yellow-orange. A form with exceptionally white-tomentose leaves near Copenhagen, Louisiana, is probably this species. Crataegus regalis var. paradoxa (Sargent) E. J. Palmer, from Missouri and adjacent Kansas and Arkansas, is probably a hybrid between the deeply serrated 'regalis' leaf form of C. crus-galli and a form of C. berberifolia. Two common forms of C. berberifolia occur, treated here as varieties: var. engelmannii with ten pink anthers and var. berberifolia with 20 cream anthers. Forms with 20 pink or ten cream anthers also occur sporadically. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Crataegus ashei occurs from Louisiana to Alabama and is apparently scarce. Crataegus ashei has often been confused with both C. triflora (ser. Triflorae) and C. harbisonii; it differs from C. triflora in its different growth habit with branching more or less layered and leaves smallish, flowers smaller, stamens 20–24, and leaves usually more coriaceous and shiny with lobes absent. Crataegus ashei is more similar to C. harbisonii, mainly differing in being smaller in its vegetative parts, invariably lacking reproductive side shoots of the season, and by having entire leaves. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
||||
Key |
|
|||||
Source | FNA vol. 9, p. 540. | FNA vol. 9, p. 608. | ||||
Parent taxa | Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Crataegus > sect. Coccineae > ser. Crus-galli | Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Crataegus > sect. Coccineae > ser. Bracteatae | ||||
Sibling taxa | ||||||
Subordinate taxa | ||||||
Name authority | Torrey & A. Gray: Fl. N. Amer. 1: 469. (1840) | Beadle: Bot. Gaz. 30: 339. (1900) | ||||
Web links |