Cotoneaster atropurpureus

Flinck & B. Hylmö

Watsonia 18: 311. 1991.

Common names: Prostrate or purple-flowered cotoneaster
IllustratedIntroduced
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 9. Treatment on page 461. Mentioned on page 453.

Shrubs, 0.5–1 m. Stems ascending to erect, spreading horizontally, arching; branches divaricate, sometimes distichous, red-purple, initially densely yellowish strigose-villous. Leaves deciduous; petiole 1–2 mm, yellow-villous; blade elliptic, on vigorous shoots obovate-orbiculate, 9–14 × 8–12 mm, chartaceous, base obtuse or acute, margins flat or slightly undulate, veins 2 or 3, superficial or slightly sunken, apex obtuse or truncate, mucronulate, abaxial surfaces shiny, sparsely golden yellow-pilose, adaxial green to dark green, shiny, not glaucous, flat or scarcely bulging between lateral veins, glabrous; fall leaves ruby red. Inflorescences on fertile shoots 9–11 mm with 3 leaves, (1 or)2 or 3-flowered, compact. Pedicels 0.2–1 mm, pilose. Flowers 6 mm, closed or nearly so; hypanthium funnelform, sparsely yellow-pilose-strigose; sepals: margins yellow-villous, apex green and red-purple, acuminate or acute, surfaces sparsely pilose; petals erect-incurved, dark red, base purple-black, margins narrowly white; stamens 10–14, filaments dark red to dark purple-red, white distally, anthers white [pink-tinged]; styles 2 or 3(or 4). Pomes bright red, usually broadly obovoid, sometimes obovoid, 7–8 × 7–8 mm, shiny, not glaucous, glabrate; sepals suberect, margins villous, sparsely pilose; navel open; style remnants 3/4 from base. Pyrenes 2 or 3(or 4).


Phenology: Flowering May; fruiting Sep–Jan.
Habitat: Thickets, rock roadcuts, paths, edges of disturbed forests
Elevation: 0–400 m

Distribution

V9 775-distribution-map.jpg

Introduced; N.Y., Wash., Asia (China), introduced also in Europe.

Discussion

Although treated as synonymous with Cotoneaster horizontalis by L. Lingdi and A. R. Brach (2003), C. atropurpureus is separated by having somewhat thinner leaves on vigorous shoots that tend to be obovate instead of broadly elliptic, with obtuse to truncate apices and sometimes slightly wavy margins. It also tends towards less regular branching and somewhat darker petals and filaments.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Cotoneaster atropurpureus"
Jeanette Fryer +, Bertil Hylmö† +  and Peter F. Zika +
Flinck & B. Hylmö +
Prostrate or purple-flowered cotoneaster +
N.Y. +, Wash. +, Asia (China) +  and introduced also in Europe. +
0–400 m +
Thickets, rock roadcuts, paths, edges of disturbed forests +
Flowering May +  and fruiting Sep–Jan. +
Illustrated +  and Introduced +
Ostinia +
Cotoneaster atropurpureus +
Cotoneaster +
species +