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American mistletoe, oak mistletoe

Bollean mistletoe, fir mistletoe

Habit Subshrubs, erect, 4–10 dm, dioecious. Subshrubs, erect, forming globose clumps to 10 dm diam., dioecious.
Stems

green, grayish green, or yellowish green, hairy, hairs simple or stellate, white or yellow, becoming glabrate;

internodes terete, 8–59 × 1–3 mm.

green, brown, reddish brown, or orange, glabrous or slightly puberulent, hairs simple;

internodes terete, to 2 cm.

Leaves

bright green, yellowish green, or grayish green, well developed, hairy, hairs simple or stellate;

petiole 3–8 mm;

blade obovate, spatulate, ovate, ovate-elliptic, or nearly orbiculate, 14–48 × 8–30 mm, thin to thick and rigid, base cuneate to obtuse, apex rounded;

basal phyllotaxy transverse.

green, well developed, glabrous or slightly puberulent, hairs simple;

petiole very short or absent;

blade terete to narrowly oblong or oblanceolate, 7–35 × 1–10 mm, thin, base slightly tapered, apex acute-apiculate to rounded;

basal phyllotaxy transverse.

Flowers

petals 3, 1 mm.

petals 3–4, 1–2 mm.

Berries

white, oblong to globose, 3–6 × 2–5 mm, glabrous.

white to pink, ovoid, 3.5–5 × 3.5–5 mm, glabrous.

Staminate

inflorescences 10–80 mm, hairy, hairs simple or stellate;

peduncle with 1 internodes, 2–4 mm;

fertile internodes 2–7, each (15–)29–39(–62)-flowered, triseriate, becoming irregular, flowers 1–10 per column.

inflorescences 3–6 mm, glabrous or slightly puberulent, hairs simple;

peduncle with 1 internode, 1–2 mm;

fertile internode usually 1, 6–20-flowered, triseriate, flowers 1–3 per column or not in columns.

Pistillate

inflorescences 10–80 mm, hairy, hairs simple or stellate;

peduncle with 1 internode, 2–4 mm;

fertile internodes 2–6, each (4–)6–11(–20)-flowered, triseriate, flowers 1–3 per column.

inflorescences 3–6 mm, elongating in fruit, glabrous or slightly puberulent, hairs simple;

peduncle with 1 internode, 1.5–3 mm;

fertile internodes 1(–2), each 2-flowered, flowers 1 per bract.

2n

= 28.

Phoradendron leucarpum

Phoradendron bolleanum

Phenology Flowering Oct–Mar. Flowering May–Aug.
Habitat Hardwood forests and woodlands. Coniferous forests.
Elevation 0–1800 m. (0–5900 ft.) 300–3000 m. (1000–9800 ft.)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; AZ; CA; DC; DE; FL; GA; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MD; MO; MS; NC; NJ; NM; NY; OH; OK; OR; PA; SC; TN; TX; VA; WV; Mexico (Chihuahua, Coahuila, Durango, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Sonora, Tamaulipas)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
AZ; CA; NM; OR; TX; Mexico; Central America (Guatemala)
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

J. Kuijt (2003) used the name Phoradendron serotinum, based on the name Viscum serotinum Rafinesque (1820), not P. leucarpum, which is based on the earlier name by the same author, V. leucarpum (1817). A proposal to conserve the later name (D. L. Nickrent et al. 2010b) was not accepted, thus the name P. leucarpum has priority.

Phoradendron leucarpum has a convoluted taxonomic history, reflecting not only various species concepts but also complex evolutionary and ecological processes. Among the 234 species of Phoradendron, J. Kuijt (2003) recognized subspecies only in P. leucarpum (as P. serotinum). In addition to the typical subspecies from eastern Texas eastward, they are subsp. augustifolium from Mexico, subsp. macrophyllum from eastern Texas through New Mexico and Arizona to California and Oregon, and subsp. tomentosum, with about the same distribution as subsp. macrophyllum but also extending into Mexico. Kuijt noted that in some geographic areas, such as east-central Texas, the putative subspecies show a continuum of morphological intergradation.

A population genetic and morphometric study of this complex was undertaken by A. K. Hawkins (2010). Principal component analyses using the characters that J. Kuijt (2003) considered to be diagnostic of the subspecies, such as leaf size, color, and venation, as well as the type and density of hairs present on young vegetative and reproductive tissues, in addition to host species, did not result in clusters corresponding to the four described subspecies. Moreover, FST analyses of microsatellites showed significant interpopulational differentiation that did not match the subspecies that Kuijt recognized. Because morphological and molecular analyses show that subspecies, at least as defined by Kuijt, cannot be differentiated in Phoradendron leucarpum, no subspecies are accepted here.

Phoradendron leucarpum is the only species of the genus found east of Texas. It parasitizes over 60 species of native and introduced trees, especially Acer, Fraxinus, Juglans, Nyssa, Platanus, Populus, Quercus, Salix, and Ulmus.

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

This treatment follows J. Kuijt (2003), who considered Phoradendron bolleanum to be a widespread and variable species complex. The three main taxa that often have been recognized as species are Phoradendron bolleanum in the narrow sense, P. densum, and P. pauciflorum,. Phoradendron bolleanum in the narrow sense has small, narrow leaves and frequently parasitizes Juniperus as well as Arbutus. The P. pauciflorum variant has broad leaves and mostly parasitizes Abies concolor. The P. densum variant tends to have leaves that are intermediate between those of the other two variants; it ranges from Oregon to Mexico and parasitizes Cupressus and Juniperus. Molecular analyses indicate that P. bolleanum is not monophyletic unless P. minutifolium Urban is synonymized with the other variants. Hybrids between P. bolleanum and P. juniperinum produce plants closely resembling P. minutifolium (D. Wiens and M. DeDecker 1972). As pointed out by Kuijt, molecular studies will be required to determine species boundaries within this complex.

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

Source FNA vol. 12, p. 437. FNA vol. 12, p. 436.
Parent taxa Viscaceae > Phoradendron Viscaceae > Phoradendron
Sibling taxa
P. bolleanum, P. californicum, P. capitellatum, P. juniperinum, P. rubrum, P. villosum
P. californicum, P. capitellatum, P. juniperinum, P. leucarpum, P. rubrum, P. villosum
Synonyms Viscum leucarpum, P. coloradense, P. eatonii, P. flavens subsp. macrophyllum, P. flavens var. macrophyllum, P. flavens var. tomentosum, P. flavescens, P. leucarpum subsp. angustifolium, P. leucarpum subsp. macrophyllum, P. leucarpum subsp. tomentosum, P. longispicum, P. macrotomum, P. serotinum, P. serotinum subsp. macrophyllum, P. serotinum var. macrophyllum, P. serotinum var. macrotomum, P. serotinum subsp. tomentosum, P. tomentosum, P. tomentosum subsp. macrophyllum, P. tomentosum var. macrophyllum Viscum bolleanum, P. bolleanum subsp. densum, P. bolleanum var. densum, P. bolleanum subsp. pauciflorum, P. densum, P. hawksworthii, P. pauciflorum
Name authority (Rafinesque) Reveal & M. C. Johnston: Taxon 38: 107. (1989) (Seemann) Eichler: in C. F. P. von Martius et al., Fl. Bras. 5(2): 134m. (1868)
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