Crataegus pruinosa var. rugosa

(Ashe) Kruschke

Publ. Bot. Milwaukee Public Mus. 3: 181. 1965.

Endemic
Basionym: Crataegus rugosa Ashe J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 17: 5. 1900
Synonyms: C. leiophylla Sargent C. mackenziei Sargent ex Mackenzie C. rubicundula Sargent C. seclusa Sargent C. seducta Sargent
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 9. Treatment on page 576. Mentioned on page 575, 577.
Revision as of 00:35, 28 May 2020 by imported>Volume Importer

Shrubs or trees, 20–40(–70) dm, usually branched to base. Leaves: blade broadly ovate to deltate, 3–7 cm, length/width = 1–1.2, lobes 2–4 per side, distinct, lobe apex acute, base very broadly cuneate or truncate to weakly subcordate, adaxial surface glabrous, sometimes sparsely appressed-hairy along veins. Inflorescence branches glabrous. Flowers 15–22 mm diam.; stamens 20, anthers pale pink.


Phenology: Flowering Apr–May; fruiting Sep–Nov.
Habitat: Open scrub, light woodland shade
Elevation: 50–300 m

Distribution

V9 981-distribution-map.jpg

Ont., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Ky., Mich., Mo., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Pa., Tenn., Wis.

Discussion

Variety rugosa is fairly common from Missouri to the mountains of North Carolina, then northward through the range of the species. The variety often has the most proportionately wide and most deeply incised leaves of the Crataegus pruinosa group. The leaves also characteristically have sharper and longer marginal teeth than other varieties. Extremes are C. mackenziei with acute lobes and C. seducta with rather obtuse lobes.

Unnamed plants of the southern Appalachian piedmont, very likely worthy of at least varietal rank, will key here and are differentiated from var. rugosa as follows: leaf blade 4–6 cm (3–7 cm in var. rugosa), laminas thin (finally chartaceous to somewhat coriaceous in var. rugosa), basal corners of leaf rounded, bases often subcordate (not conspicuously rounded, bases rarely subcordate in var. rugosa).

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
James B. Phipps +
(Ashe) Kruschke +
Crataegus rugosa +
Ont. +, Ill. +, Ind. +, Iowa +, Ky. +, Mich. +, Mo. +, N.Y. +, N.C. +, Ohio +, Pa. +, Tenn. +  and Wis. +
50–300 m +
Open scrub, light woodland shade +
Flowering Apr–May +  and fruiting Sep–Nov. +
Publ. Bot. Milwaukee Public Mus. +
C. leiophylla +, C. mackenziei +, C. rubicundula +, C. seclusa +  and C. seducta +
Crataegus pruinosa var. rugosa +
Crataegus pruinosa +
variety +