Sorbus hybrida |
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hybrid mountain ash, oak-leaf mountain-ash, Swedish mountain-ash, Swedish service-tree |
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Habit | Trees, 30–120 dm. |
Stems | single or multistemmed; bark gray; winter buds brownish to purple, ovoid to ovoid-conic, 4–10 mm, dull, not glutinous, densely white-villous, at least distally and on scale margins. |
Leaves | proximally pinnately compound, lobed distally; stipules deciduous or persistent, often white-villous; blade paler green abaxially, dull green adaxially, ovate to oblong-ovate, rarely oblong, 7–13 × 5–11 cm, pinnately lobed with (1 or)2(or 3) pairs of sessile or decurrent, free, oblong leaflets, terminal leaflets 7–10-lobed, margins serrate at least distally, lobe and leaflet apex acute or obtuse, lateral veins 7–10 pairs, abaxial surface whitish-tomentose. |
Panicles | 25–75-flowered, flat-topped or rounded, 4.5–10 cm diam.; peduncles white-villous. |
Pedicels | white-villous. |
Flowers | 10–15 mm diam.; hypanthium tomentose, hypanthium plus sepals 5–7.5 mm; sepals 1.5–4 mm, margins usually entire, rarely with inconspicuous glands; petals white, suborbiculate, broadly obovate, broadly ovate, or broadly elliptic, 5–7 mm; stamens 20; carpels 1/2 adnate to hypanthium, apex conic, styles 2 or 3, 2–3 mm. |
Infructescences | glabrate to villous. |
Pomes | red, globose to subglobose, 8–15 mm diam., shiny, not glaucous; sepals inconspicuous, incurved. |
Seeds | red-brown, ovoid, 5–6 × 2 mm, asymmetric, slightly flattened. |
2n | = 68. |
Sorbus hybrida |
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Phenology | Flowering spring; fruiting fall. |
Habitat | Woods, rocky slopes, disturbed ground and edges near towns |
Elevation | 0–1000 m (0–3300 ft) |
Distribution |
UT; VT; WA; NB; n Europe [Introduced in North America]
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Discussion | Sorbus hybrida is considered an apomictic tetraploid producing fully fertile pollen and seed and subject to dispersal. An almost undistinguishable European taxon, S. ×thuringiaca (Ilse) Fritsch, often confused with S. hybrida, has been reported for New Hampshire and Vermont. Described as an unstable diploid hybrid between S. aria and S. aucuparia, S. ×thuringiaca has oblong leaves, 1–3(–5) pairs of free leaflets, 10–12(–13) pairs of lateral veins, and produces sterile pollen and relatively few viable seeds. Uncritical reports of escaped S. ×thuringiaca in North America should be considered doubtful; they probably refer to the more likely S. hybrida. The authors have not seen a specimen to document a report of S. hybrida from Montana. Sorbus hybrida is placed in subg. Sorbus following J. J. Aldasoro et al. (2004), based on leaf division and pome characteristics, including the lack of tanniferous cells in parenchyma, lack of starch, and relatively small sclereid groups. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 9, p. 438. |
Parent taxa | Rosaceae > subfam. Amygdaloideae > tribe Maleae > Sorbus > subg. Sorbus > sect. Sorbus |
Sibling taxa | |
Name authority | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. ed. 2, 1: 684. (1762) |
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