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aubépine flabelliforme, fan-leaf hawthorn

Habit Shrubs or trees, 40–50 dm. Shrubs or trees, (5–)30–110(–150) dm.
Stems

twigs: new growth reddish at first, usually sparsely pubescent, 1-year old deep chestnut brown, older dull gray;

thorns on twigs 1-year old shiny, dark brown, stout to slender, 4–6 cm.

trunks 1–several, ± erect to oblique, bark usually flattened-scaly, sometimes corrugated or thin-exfoliating;

compound thorns on trunks present or absent;

thorns on twigs determinate, straight to recurved, slender to stout.

Leaves

petiole 1–2 mm wide, length 40–50% blade, glandular;

blade glossy, dark green, broadly elliptic to ovate, 4–7 cm, base cuneate to slightly rounded, lobes 4 or 5 per side, sinuses deep, lobe apex acuminate, margins sharply serrate, teeth gland-tipped, veins 5 or 6 per side, apex acute, abaxial surface glabrous except along veins, adaxial densely appressed-scabrous young, glabrescent.

blade broadly lanceolate, elliptic, spatulate, obovate, obtrullate, rhombic-ovate, broadly ovate to suborbiculate, 1–8(–12) cm, length 1.6–2 times width, coriaceous to thin, lobes 0 or 1–4 or 5(–9), sinuses usually shallow, sometimes deep, veins 1–8(–10) per side, absent to sinuses, matte.

Inflorescences

5–10-flowered;

branches villous;

bracteole frequency not recorded, linear.

branches glabrous or pubescent;

symmetric bracteoles present, basal stipuliform, falcate bracteoles absent.

Flowers

13–17 mm diam.;

hypanthium glabrous or villous at base;

sepals 4–5 mm, margins entire, glandular to glandular-serrate, rarely nearly eglandular, apex acute, abaxial pubescence not recorded;

stamens 5–10 or 20, anthers usually pink;

styles 3–5.

post-mature petals pale paper brown;

stamens (5–)10 or 20(–47), rarely ca. 15, anthers pink to purple or white to cream.

Pomes

crimson, ± ellipsoid, 8–10 mm diam., sometimes ± pruinose;

sepals spreading or usually erose, not or obscurely elevated;

pyrenes 3–5, dorsally deeply grooved.

usually red, sometimes yellow, orange, or pink mauve, sometimes remaining green until late, or green-blotched, sometimes ± conspicuously pruinose;

pyrene sides plane (to shallowly concave in C. ursopedensis).

2n

= 51.

Crataegus flabellata

Crataegus sect. Coccineae

Phenology Flowering May–Jun; fruiting Sep–Oct.
Habitat Brush, successional fields, fencelines, woodland edges, open woodlands
Elevation 10–200 m (0–700 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
CT; MA; ME; NH; NY; VT; NB; NS; ON; QC
[WildflowerSearch map]
North America; Mexico [Introduced in Europe]
Discussion

Crataegus flabellata occurs along the Niagara Escarpment in Ontario, on both sides of Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence, to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and to Massachusetts. Reports for Newfoundland have not been substantiated.

Crataegus flabellata is distinctive with its leaf blades glossy dark green, ovate to broadly elliptic, cuneate at the base, and with deep acuminate lobes. Specimens with less glandularity or serration of the sepal margins may resemble C. fluviatilis. In spite of the obvious differences in morphology and range, C. flabellata and C. macrosperma often have been combined by floristicians. From C. chrysocarpa, C. flabellata is distinguished by its shinier, ellipsoid, glabrous fruit, by the usually deeper, acuminate lobes of its glossy, dark green leaves, and by longer, slightly more acute sepals. Typically, the inflorescences and hypanthia of eastern C. chrysocarpa are densely hairy, practically tomentose, unlike C. flabellata with its more sparsely hairy pedicels and glabrous distal hypanthia. It is conceivable that, due to morphological intermediacy and the sympatry of all three species within the range of C. flabellata, this species represents the result of ancient hybridization between C. chrysocarpa and C. macrosperma.

Crataegus flabellata is usually divided into two varieties: var. flabellata (10 stamens) and var. grayana (20 stamens), the latter being particularly common in southern Quebec. There appears to be little, if any, other constant differentiating feature. Crataegus crudelis, also from Quebec, is a form recognized by long thorns (to 10 cm).

The name Crataegus densiflora Sargent, which pertains to C. flabellata, is illegitimate.

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

Species 128 (119 in the flora).

Section Coccineae includes 20 series and constitutes the main North American hawthorn diversification which comprises a single clade when sect. Macracanthae is included (E. Y. Y. Lo et al. 2009). Variation in habit, leaf shape, glandularity, and other characters, permits recognition of more or less distinct series; the delimitation of some series may warrant further attention. Most groups with leaf lobes absent, for example, ser. Aestivales, Crus-galli, Punctatae, and Madrenses, are found here, as are series that tolerate particularly extreme conditions for Crataegus, for example, ser. Aestivales (southeastern wetlands) and ser. Lacrimatae (southeastern xeromorphs).

Series Anomalae and ser. Macracanthae are often included in sect. Coccineae; here they are placed in sect. Macracanthae because their pyrenes are pitted.

Series Microcarpae (sect. Crataegus) is included at couplet 44 below to handle common forms that key out there with little lobing and, thus, no veins to sinuses. The interserial hybrids Crataegus persimilis and C. ×sicca key out at couplets 16 and 20, respectively; C. turnerorum keys out in part at couplets 18 and 31.

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

Key
1. Inflorescences 2–6-flowered (± umbellate); flowering before or with young leaves, anthesis very early, before other sympatric hawthorns; pomes ripe May–late June; se United States, wetlands.
C. ser. Aestivales
1. Inflorescences usually 7–25-flowered (if 1–6-flowered, not ± umbellate); not flowering before or with young leaves, anthesis later; pomes ripe August–October; mostly in toplands, except few se United States species
→ 2
2. Bracteoles, at least larger, usually ± herbaceous, usually ± persistent, others sometimes membranous but sometimes caducous; flowers 18–30 mm diam
→ 3
2. Bracteoles usually ± membranous, sometimes ± herbaceous, usually caducous, sometimes fugacious or ± persistent, rarely deciduous; flowers 8–25(–26) mm diam
→ 8
3. Leaves and petioles eglandular or sparsely glandular
→ 4
3. Leaves and petioles gland-dotted or stipitate-glandular
→ 5
4. Pomes orange-red, bright or deep red, or bright yellow, not pruinose; flesh mealy; fruiting sepals erect or erect-patent to broadly spreading, rarely incurved, often ± accrescent; larger bracteoles narrowly oblong, abaxially villous.
C. ser. Molles
4. Pomes bright pink to crimson, glabrous or pubescent at ends; flesh ± hard; fruiting sepals spreading or ± reflexed, non-accrescent; larger bracteoles oblong to curved, abaxially glabrous.
C. ser. Dilatatae
5. Flowers 25–30 mm diam.; stamens 10 or 30–45(–47); shrubs multi-stemmed, main trunk not dominant; leaf blades ± chartaceous; inflorescences frequently arising laterally from extension shoots.
C. ser. Triflorae
5. Flowers 18–25 mm diam.; stamens (5 or)10 or 20–25; shrubs or trees 1- to few-stemmed, main trunk dominant; leaf blades usually thick and ± chartaceous or thinner but subcoriaceous; inflorescences either arising solely subterminally from woody short shoots (ser. Molles, ser. Dilatatae), or sometimes arising laterally from extension shoots (ser. Bracteatae)
→ 6
6. Leaves: lobes 0 or 1–4 per side, merely apiculi or sinuses very shallow, deep green, subcoriaceous; petioles 15–25% length of blade; inflorescences 3–12-flowered; stamens 20(–25); larger bracteoles ligulate, semipersistent, margins strongly stipitate-glandular.
C. ser. Bracteatae
6. Leaves: lobes usually 1–6 per side, distinct, sinuses shallow to deep, green or bluish green, ± thick or chartaceous; petioles 30–50% length of blade; inflorescences 5–20-flowered; stamens (5 or)10 or 20; larger bracteoles narrow to linear, subherbaceous, margins sessile-glandular (ser. Molles), or larger bracteoles oblong to curved, abaxially glabrous, margins strongly stipitate-glandular (ser. Dilatatae)
→ 7
7. Pomes orange-red, bright or deep red, not pruinose; flesh mealy; fruiting sepals erect or erect-patent to broadly spreading, rarely incurved, often ± accrescent; larger bracteoles narrowly oblong, abaxially villous.
C. ser. Molles
7. Pomes bright pink to crimson, glabrous or pubescent at ends; flesh ± hard; fruiting sepals spreading or ± reflexed, not accrescent; larger bracteoles oblong to curved, abaxially glabrous.
C. ser. Dilatatae
8. Petioles usually eglandular; if petioles ± glandular, sepal margins not glandular-denticulate, -serrate, or -laciniate
→ 9
8. Petioles, at least some, glandular; sepal margins glandular-denticulate, -serrate, -laciniate, or -pectinate
→ 33
9. Leaves: lobes 0 or not much bigger than teeth
→ 10
9. Leaves: lobes evident and distinct
→ 21
10. Bracteoles linear-filiform, margins eglandular or sparsely glandular; pomes 5–8 mm diam
C. ser. Virides
10. Bracteoles narrowly elliptic, linear, or narrow, margins sparsely glandular; pomes 8–15 mm diam
→ 11
11. Sepal margins entire or slightly glandular-serrate
→ 12
11. Sepal margins glandular-serrate to glandular-laciniate or -pectinate
→ 16
12. Leaf blades usually ± thin or chartaceous, matte
→ 13
12. Leaf blades subcoriaceous, glossy
→ 14
13. Inflorescence branches pubescent.
C. ser. Punctatae
13. Inflorescence branches glabrous.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
14. Leaves and inflorescence branches glabrous.
C. ser. Crus-galli
14. Leaves and inflorescence branches hairy, particularly young
→ 15
15. Styles and pyrenes 1–3; se United States.
C. ser. Crus-galli
15. Styles and pyrenes 3–5; Texas.
C. ser. Madrenses
16. Pyrene sides pitted.
C. persimilis
16. Pyrene sides plane
→ 17
17. Leaf blades ± isodiametric, blue-green mature, woolly.
C. ser. Molles
17. Leaf blades longer than wide, green to dark green mature, appressed- or scabrous-pubescent, glabrous, or white-tomentose
→ 18
18. Leaves: veins 3 per side; stamens 15.
C. turnerorum
18. Leaves: veins 4–7 per side; stamens 10 or 20
→ 19
19. Petiole length 20–30% blade; blades matte, villous to tomentose.
C. ser. Greggianae
19. Petiole length usually 20–50% blade; blades glossy, glabrous or sparsely appressed-pubescent
→ 20
20. Leaf blades scabrous, veins 5 or 6 per side; Texas.
C. ser. Madrenses
20. Leaf blades glabrous, veins 7 per side; n United States, adjacent Canada.
C. ×sicca
21. Inflorescence branches pubescent
→ 22
21. Inflorescence branches glabrous
→ 27
22. Bracteoles linear-filiform, margins eglandular or sparsely glandular.
C. ser. Virides
22. Bracteoles linear to oblong, margins stipitate- or sessile-glandular
→ 23
23. Sepal margins glandular-laciniate to -serrate; leaf blades hard, chartaceous, or coriaceous; fruiting sepals erect or erect-patent, sometimes spreading
→ 24
23. Sepal margins entire or subentire; leaf blades thin; fruiting sepals erect-patent to recurved
→ 25
24. Leaf blades broadly ovate or broadly elliptic to rhombic-elliptic, 2.5–4(–5) cm; flowers 15 mm diam.; c Texas, ± xeromorphs.
C. ser. Greggianae
24. Leaf blades broadly elliptic to ovate, 4–8(–12) cm; flowers 18–22 mm diam.; e Texas to Alabama n to Minnesota and Quebec, mainly mesophytes.
C. ser. Molles
25. Flowers (10–)13–17(–26) mm diam
C. ser. Tenuifoliae
25. Flowers 18–23 mm diam
→ 26
26. Fruiting sepals sessile.
C. ser. Punctatae
26. Fruiting sepals elevated.
C. ser. Pruinosae
27. Inflorescences (10–)15–30+-flowered, bracteoles linear-filiform (length/width = 10–20:1), margins eglandular or sparsely glandular; pomes 5–8 mm diam.; leaves with tufts of hair in abaxial vein axils (not discernable in rare pubescent form); southeastern, damp ground.
C. ser. Virides
27. Inflorescences 3–15-flowered, bracteoles linear or narrowly elliptic, margins sessile- or stipitate-glandular; pomes 7–15(–20) mm diam.; leaves lacking tufts of hair in abaxial vein axils; topland species
→ 28
28. Leaves: adaxial surfaces of young blades glabrous (except along veins in some taxa and on whole adaxial surface in C. virella); pomes pink, mauve, or pale green, sometimes scarlet, deep crimson, or purple, often strongly pruinose, flesh hard; fruiting sepals usually on prominent collar.
C. ser. Pruinosae
28. Leaves: adaxial surfaces of young blades glabrous or sparsely hairy; pomes yellow to reddish mature, not strongly pruinose, flesh hard or mellow; fruiting sepals usually sessile, sometimes slightly elevated
→ 29
29. Twigs 1–2-years old dark brown, dark purple-brown, or reddish brown to blackish, often ± pruinose
→ 30
29. Twigs 1–2-years old not both purple-brown and ± pruinose
→ 31
30. Leaves: veins 4–6 per side, blades 2.5–4(–5) cm; petioles eglandular, length 25–33% blade; stamens 10.
C. ser. Greggianae
30. Leaves: veins 3–5(or 6) per side, blades 2–7 cm; petioles sparsely glandular, length 20–30% blade; stamens 10(or 20).
Crataegus ser. Populneae
31. Stamens 15, anthers purple; c Texas.
C. turnerorum
31. Stamens 5–10 or 20, anthers pink to purple or ivory; e, n United States, adjacent Canada
→ 32
32. Leaves: lobes well defined, lobe apices usually acute, blades 3–6(–8) cm, apices acute; petioles glandular or eglandular; anthers pink to red or purple; pomes red, ellipsoid to suborbicular, sepals erect-patent to recurved or erose.
C. ser. Tenuifoliae
32. Leaves: lobe sinuses usually shallow, lobe apices subacute to obtuse, sometimes acuminate, blades 2–4(–5) cm, apices acuminate to obtuse; petioles eglandular or with 1–2 tiny glands; anthers ivory, sometimes pink; pomes usually bright to deep red or yellowish, sometimes orangish or burgundy, usually ± suborbicular, sometimes ellipsoid or oblong, sepals reflexed.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
33. Petioles, at least some, stipitate-glandular; bracteole margins usually short-stipitate- to stipitate-glandular
→ 34
33. Petioles sessile-glandular; bracteole margins usually sessile-glandular to short-stipitate-glandular, except stipitate-glandular in ser. Intricatae, ser. Pulcherrimae, or C. dodgei group (larger bracteoles only, or some ser. Lacrimatae), rarely ± eglandular
→ 40
34. Leaf blades ± elliptic to narrowly obovate or ovate, lobes 0 or obscure, subcoriaceous, (shiny at maturity); pomes orange-red to red, sepals not elevated on collar.
C. ser. Bracteatae
34. Leaf blades broadly elliptic to elliptic, ovate or deltate, broadly ovate to rhombic-elliptic or rhombic, lobes 0 or 1–5 (if lobes 0, not elliptic to narrowly obovate), if so, short to moderately deep, usually ± thin, (not particularly shiny at maturity); pomes yellow to red, sepals ± elevated on collar, sometimes sessile
→ 35
35. Pomes with sepals sessile; se United States
→ 36
35. Pomes with sepals ± elevated on collar; e or se United States
→ 37
36. Leaf blades 3–5 cm, elliptic to broadly elliptic or suborbicular, base rounded to broadly truncate, lobes 3 or 4 per side, distinct, veins 4 or 5 per side; inflorescence branches coarsely hairy.
Crataegus ser. Populneae
36. Leaf blades 2.5–4(–5) cm, ovate to obovate or rhombic-ovate, base ± cuneate, lobes 0 or 1–3 per side, obscure, veins 5 or 6(or 7) per side; inflorescence branches appressed-scabrous.
C. ser. Apricae
37. Stamens 10; trunk bark fibrous, checked into longitudinal plates or corrugated; e United States to Missouri.
C. ser. Intricatae
37. Stamens 20; trunk bark often corrugated; Texas to Georgia.
C. ser. Pulcherrimae
38. Inflorescence branches hairy.
C. ser. Intricatae
38. Inflorescence branches glabrous
→ 39
39. Leaf blades 4–7 cm.
C. ser. Pulcherrimae
39. Leaf blades 2–4 cm.
C. ser. Intricatae
40. Twigs ± strongly flexuous, rarely slightly flexuous; leaf blades 1–4(–5) cm; (ultimate branches ± conspicuously pendulous, except in dwarf forms less than 10 dm)
→ 41
40. Twigs straight, only rarely flexuous; leaf blades 2–6(–10) cm; (ultimate branches not especially drooping)
→ 44
41. Dwarf species usually 0.5–2 m; twigs ± strongly flexuous, ultimate branches not markedly pendulous.
C. ser. Lacrimatae
41. Larger species usually 2–7 m; twigs slightly to strongly flexuous, upper branches often ± pendulous
→ 42
42. Leaf blades predominantly narrow, usually elliptic to oblong or narrowly obovate, sometimes obtrullate, ovate, or suborbicualte, usually widest toward tip, veins 1–5 per side (exiting mainly or wholly in apical part of blade), apices obtuse to acute; (upper branches conspicuously drooping).
C. ser. Lacrimatae
42. Leaf blades suborbiculate to broadly ovate or rhombic-elliptic, veins 1–3 per side in small-leaved forms (1–2 cm), usually 3–5 per side in larger-leaved forms, terminating along leaf length, apices acute to obtuse; (upper branches gently to conspicuously drooping)
→ 43
43. Leaves, especially young, glabrous or scabrous adaxially; (upper branches often slightly drooping, at most slightly flexuous); bracteoles ± stipitate-glandular; stamens 10 or 20, anthers ivory, cream, or pink to purple or red.
C. ser. Apricae
43. Leaves, especially young, ± glabrous or woolly-tomentose adaxially; (upper branches drooping, clearly flexuous); bracteoles sessile- to short-stipitate-glandular; stamens 20, anthers ivory or cream.
C. ser. Lacrimatae
44. Trunk bark smooth and exfoliating; pomes 4–6 mm diam
Crataegus (sect. Crataegus) ser. Microcarpae
44. Trunk bark rough, scaly, fibrous, checked into longitudinal plates, or corrugated; pomes 8–14(–20) mm diam
→ 45
45. Leaves: lobes 0 or shallow, sinuate; inflorescences 1–5-flowered; sepals ± equal to petals.
C. ser. Parvifoliae
45. Leaves: lobes 0 or distinctly lobed; inflorescences 3–15-flowered; sepals shorter than petals
→ 46
46. Stamens (10–)20; pomes pink, mauve, or pale green, sometimes scarlet, deep crimson, or purple, strongly pruinose, flesh ± hard.
C. ser. Pruinosae
46. Stamens 10 or 20; pomes reddish or yellowish, seldom strongly pruinose, flesh ± hard to mealy
→ 47
47. Stamens 13–18, anthers purple.
C. ser. Intricatae
47. Stamens 5–10 or ca. 20, anthers white to cream or pale pink to pink-purple or red
→ 48
48. Fruiting sepals elevated on short but distinct collar; glands of at least larger bracteoles clearly stipitate
→ 49
48. Fruiting sepals sessile; glands of bracteoles sessile or stipitate
→ 52
49. Stamens 10.
C. ser. Intricatae
49. Stamens 20
→ 50
50. Inflorescence branches hairy; leaves 4–9 cm (rarely glabrous to sparsely hairy; if so, leaves 3–4 cm and anthers rose).
C. ser. Intricatae
50. Inflorescence branches glabrous; leaves 4–9 cm (if 3–4 cm, anthers white to cream)
→ 51
51. Fruiting sepals elevated on distinct collar; glands on all bracteoles stipitate; se United States.
C. ser. Pulcherrimae
51. Fruiting sepals elevated on short collar; glands only on larger, lower bracteoles stipitate; midwestern United States and adjacent Canada.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
52. Anthers white to cream, rarely palest pink; bracteoles sessile- or stipitate-glandular
→ 53
52. Anthers pale pink or pink to red or purple; bracteoles sessile- or very short-stipitate-glandular
→ 56
53. Bracteoles sessile- or very short-stipitate-glandular; stamens 10 or 20; inflorescence branches glabrous or hairy
→ 54
53. At least larger bracteoles stipitate-glandular; stamens 10; inflorescence branches glabrous
→ 55
54. Young leaves: adaxial surfaces glabrous; stamens 10; Delaware.
Crataegus ser. Populneae
54. Young leaves: adaxial surfaces ± scabrous-hairy; stamens 10 or 20; n United States, s Canada.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
55. Shrubs or trees, 4–6 m; all bracteoles stipitate-glandular; Ozarks, possible for se United States.
C. ser. Intricatae
55. Shrubs, 2–4 m; larger bracteoles stipitate-glandular; ne United States, adjacent Canada.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
56. Sepals glandular-denticulate; stamens 10; narrower pyrenes often concave-sided; pomes bright red in late August, becoming deep red at maturity; s Alberta, Saskatchewan.
Crataegus (sect. unassigned) ser. Montaninsulae
56. Sepals usually glandular-serrate; stamens 10 or 20; all pyrenes plane-sided; pomes orange to vermillion or bright red, green, or dull red, becoming bright or deep red or burgundy at maturity; n, ne United States, s Canada
→ 57
57. Anthers very pale pink or pale cream-pink; inflorescence branches glabrous
→ 58
57. Anthers pink to pink-purple or red; inflorescence branches glabrous or hairy
→ 59
58. Anthers pale cream-pink; stamens 10; mature fruit orange to orange-brown or orange-red; Ozarks, possible for se United States.
C. ser. Intricatae
58. Anthers very pale pink; stamens 20; mature fruit burgundy; British Columbia.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
59. Inflorescence branches glabrous.
Crataegus ser. Populneae
59. Inflorescence branches hairy
→ 60
60. Shrubs 4–10 m; leaves 5–9 cm; lobes usually shallow, but if deeper, broad; flowers 16–22 mm diam.; fruits 10–14 mm; Great Lakes to New England s in Appalachians to North Carolina.
Crataegus ser. Coccineae
60. Shrubs 3–5 m; leaves 3–7 cm; lobes moderately deep, acute; flowers 13–17 mm diam.; fruits 8–10 mm; se Canada, ne United States
→ 61
61. Leaf blades usually thin, often glossy, apices acute, lobe apices acuminate; inflorescence branches villous; sepal margins usually glandular-serrate, rarely nearly entire and eglandular; styles 3–5; pomes ellipsoid.
C. ser. Tenuifoliae
61. Leaf blades thin to chartaceous, matte, apices and lobe apices acute to subacute; inflorescence branches densely pubescent or villous; sepal margins glandular-serrate; styles 3 or 4(or 5); pomes suborbicular.
C. ser. Rotundifoliae
Source FNA vol. 9, p. 567. FNA vol. 9, p. 525.
Parent taxa Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Crataegus > sect. Coccineae > ser. Tenuifoliae Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Crataegus
Sibling taxa
C. aemula, C. aestivalis, C. alabamensis, C. alleghaniensis, C. annosa, C. aprica, C. aquacervensis, C. ashei, C. atrovirens, C. attrita, C. austromontana, C. beata, C. berberifolia, C. biltmoreana, C. brachyacantha, C. brainerdii, C. brazoria, C. brittonii, C. buckleyi, C. calpodendron, C. castlegarensis, C. chrysocarpa, C. coccinea, C. coccinioides, C. cognata, C. collina, C. colonica, C. communis, C. compacta, C. condigna, C. craytonii, C. crocea, C. crus-galli, C. cupressocollina, C. delawarensis, C. dispar, C. dodgei, C. douglasii, C. egens, C. egregia, C. enderbyensis, C. erythropoda, C. exilis, C. eximia, C. extraria, C. fecunda, C. flava, C. florens, C. floridana, C. florifera, C. fluviatilis, C. formosa, C. frugiferens, C. furtiva, C. gattingeri, C. gaylussacia, C. gilva, C. greggiana, C. harbisonii, C. holmesiana, C. ignava, C. incilis, C. integra, C. intricata, C. invicta, C. iracunda, C. irrasa, C. jesupii, C. jonesiae, C. lacrimata, C. laevigata, C. lanata, C. lancei, C. lanuginosa, C. lassa, C. laurentiana, C. leonensis, C. lepida, C. levis, C. lumaria, C. macracantha, C. macrosperma, C. magniflora, C. margarettae, C. marshallii, C. mendosa, C. meridiana, C. mira, C. mollis, C. monogyna, C. munda, C. nananixonii, C. neobushii, C. nitida, C. oakesiana, C. okanaganensis, C. okennonii, C. opaca, C. opima, C. orbicularis, C. ouachitensis, C. padifolia, C. pennsylvanica, C. persimilis, C. pexa, C. phaenopyrum, C. phippsii, C. pinetorum, C. populnea, C. prona, C. pruinosa, C. pulcherrima, C. punctata, C. purpurella, C. quaesita, C. reverchonii, C. rivularis, C. rivuloadamensis, C. rivulopugnensis, C. roribacca, C. rubella, C. rubribracteolata, C. saligna, C. sargentii, C. scabrida, C. schizophylla, C. schuettei, C. segnis, C. senta, C. sheila-phippsiae, C. sheridana, C. shuswapensis, C. sororia, C. spathulata, C. spes-aestatum, C. stolonifera, C. stonei, C. submollis, C. suborbiculata, C. succulenta, C. tecta, C. teres, C. texana, C. tracyi, C. triflora, C. turnerorum, C. uniflora, C. ursopedensis, C. venusta, C. viridis, C. visenda, C. wattiana, C. williamsii, C. wootoniana, C. ×atrorubens, C. ×bicknellii, C. ×coleae, C. ×collicola, C. ×disperma, C. ×dispessa, C. ×fretalis, C. ×incaedua, C. ×kelloggii, C. ×latebrosa, C. ×lucorum, C. ×rufula, C. ×sicca, C. ×vailiae
Subordinate taxa
Crataegus (sect. Crataegus) ser. Microcarpae, Crataegus (sect. unassigned) ser. Montaninsulae, C. persimilis, C. ser. Aestivales, C. ser. Apricae, C. ser. Bracteatae, C. ser. Crus-galli, C. ser. Dilatatae, C. ser. Greggianae, C. ser. Intricatae, C. ser. Lacrimatae, C. ser. Madrenses, C. ser. Molles, C. ser. Parvifoliae, C. ser. Pruinosae, C. ser. Pulcherrimae, C. ser. Punctatae, C. ser. Rotundifoliae, C. ser. Tenuifoliae, C. ser. Triflorae, C. ser. Virides, C. turnerorum, C. ×sicca
Synonyms Mespilus flabellata, C. crudelis, C. flabellata var. densiflora, C. flabellata var. grayana, C. grayana
Name authority (Bosc ex Spach) K. Koch: Verh. Vereins Beförd. Gartenbaues Königl. Preuss. Staaten, ser. 2, 1: 240. (1853) Loudon: Arbor. Frutic. Brit. 2: 816. (1838)
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