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common pear, domestic pear, garden pear, pear

serrulate pear

Habit Plants 50–150(–300) dm. Plants 80–100 dm.
Branches

grayish brown or dark reddish brown, glabrous; short shoots of young plants often thorn-tipped.

purplish brown or dark brown, brown-tomentose when young, glabrescent;

thorns not recorded.

Leaves

petiole 1.5–5 cm, slightly pubescent when young;

blade ovate or suborbiculate to elliptic, 2–5(–7) × 1.5–2.5 cm, base broadly cuneate to almost rounded, margins obtusely serrate, serrulate, or crenulate, sometimes entire, densely ciliate when young, apex acute or shortly acuminate, surfaces pubescent when young, glabrescent.

petiole 3.5–7.5 cm, brown-tomentose when young;

blade ovate or narrowly ovate, 5–11 × 3.5–7.5 cm, base rounded or broadly cuneate, margins serrulate, apex acuminate, surfaces glabrous or brown-tomentose when young.

Pedicels

2–3.5 cm, pubescent or glabrate.

3–5 cm, pubescent when young.

Flowers

25–35 mm diam.;

sepals triangular-lanceolate, 5–9 × 3–4 mm, apex acuminate;

petals white, obovate, (12–)13–15 × 10–13 mm;

ovaries 5-locular;

styles (3–)5.

20–30 mm diam.;

sepals triangular-ovate, 3 mm, apex acute or acuminate;

petals white, broadly ovate, 10–12 mm;

ovaries 3(–4)-locular;

styles 3(or 4).

Pomes

green, yellowish, or reddish green, globose, subglobose, ovoid, or pyriform, 30–160 × 15–120 mm;

sepals persistent.

dark brown, subglobose or obovoid, 15–22 mm diam.;

sepals mostly persistent.

2n

= 34.

= 34.

Pyrus communis

Pyrus serrulata

Phenology Flowering Mar–May; fruiting Jul–Aug. Flowering Apr.
Habitat Open woods, old fields, clearings, fencerows Fields
Elevation 0–1000+ m (0–3300+ ft) 300 m (1000 ft)
Distribution
from FNA
AL; AR; CA; CT; DE; FL; GA; IA; ID; IL; IN; KS; KY; LA; MA; MD; ME; MI; MO; MS; MT; NC; NH; NJ; NM; NY; OH; OK; OR; PA; RI; SC; TN; TX; UT; VA; VT; WA; WI; WV; BC; NS; ON; Eurasia [Introduced in North America; introduced also in Mexico]
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
from FNA
MO; Asia (China) [Introduced in North America]
Discussion

Pyrus communis is frequently cultivated and escapes to adjacent habitats, where it is sometimes common or even dominant. It includes more than a thousand cultivars, most of these being fruit (pomological) varieties. Ornamental forms with variegated leaves, dissected leaves, and unusual growth habits also occur. The taxon is of hybrid origin, and its parentage is thought to involve multiple species, including P. austriaca K. Kerner, P. nivalis Jacquin, P. pyraster, and P. syriaca Boissier. Pyrus pyraster is often treated as a wild species with smaller, rounder, and more sour fruit, yet it seems likely that wild pears fitting this description have originated from cultivated stock referable to P. communis, just as self-sown apples (Malus pumila) often have smaller, sour fruits. Recent authors are followed here in treating P. pyraster as a synonym.

The leaf margins of Pyrus communis are usually densely ciliate in flowering material, and this vestiture is retained to some extent in fruiting specimens. This characteristic, along with the broader fruiting pedicels, assists in distinguishing this species from P. cordata.

The high eating-quality pears were developed in the eighteenth or nineteenth century in northern Europe, although pears had been cultivated for centuries prior to that time. Currently, much of the cultivation in North America is in the Great Lakes area and on the Pacific coast. The highest production is in Europe (France, Germany, Switzerland), where most of the crop is used for making pear cider (perry); large-scale cultivation occurs also in Argentina, Australia, and Japan. The trees sometimes attain great age, and some in eastern North America, the French mission pears, persist today where planted 300 years ago on the sites of frontier forts in what was then a wilderness. Some of these old pears are of a type now no longer cultivated and have been identified as a significant germplasm resource.

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

The tree nursery industry has associated the common name "red spire" with this species but that name is frequently applied also to Pyrus calleryana. Because it is sometimes referred to simply as "serrulata," the name "serrulate pear" seems appropriate. Pyrus serrulata has been considered a hybrid, P. calleryana × P. pyrifolia, but recent taxonomic work has accorded it specific rank. The only report of this species as an escape in North America is based on a fruiting specimen collected in Howell County, Missouri. Potential hybrids involving P. calleryana may resemble this species.

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

Source FNA vol. 9, p. 483. FNA vol. 9, p. 482.
Parent taxa Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Pyrus Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Pyrus
Sibling taxa
P. calleryana, P. cordata, P. nivalis, P. pyrifolia, P. serrulata
P. calleryana, P. communis, P. cordata, P. nivalis, P. pyrifolia
Synonyms P. ×amphigenea, P. caucasica, P. pyraster
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 479 Rehder: Proc. Amer. Acad. Arts 50: 234. (1915)
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