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It is a deciduous shrub, irregular in shape, 0.3–3 m (rarely 4 m) high and possibly somewhat wider.The bark is glabrous and copper-tinted black. The leaves are alternate, 2–7 cm long and 1–3.5 cm broad, oval to obovate, acuminate with irregularly serrate margins, rugose, dark green, pubescent above and tomentose below, with glandular petioles.
Prunus is a genus of flowering trees and shrubs from the family Rosaceae, which includes plums, cherries, peaches, nectarines, apricots and almonds (collectively stonefruit).The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution, [4] being native to the temperate regions of North America, the neotropics of South America, and temperate and tropical regions of Eurasia and Africa, [5] There are about 340 ...
Prunus avium, sweet cherry P. cerasus, sour cherry Germersdorfer variety cherry tree in blossom. Prunus subg.Cerasus contains species that are typically called cherries. They are known as true cherries [1] and distinguished by having a single winter bud per axil, by having the flowers in small corymbs or umbels of several together (occasionally solitary, e.g. P. serrula; some species with ...
Peach (Prunus persica var. persica) – Prunus tomentosa; Pear (Pyrus communis) – Pyrus pyraster and Pyrus caucasica; Pepper (Capsicum annuum) – Capsicum baccatum; Pineapple (Ananas comosus) – Ananas bracteatus; Plum (Prunus domesticus subsp. domestica)- Prunus spinosa and Prunus cerasifera; Pumpkin (Cucurbita maxima subsp. maxima ...
P. tomentosa Thunb. ... Some may have been synonymized with other fossil Prunus species, ... or even living species at some point after their description.
Although the Oxford English Dictionary regards "gage" and "greengage" as synonyms, [8] not all gages are green, and some horticulturists make a distinction between the two words, with greengages as a variety of the gages, as Prunus domestica subsp. italica var. claudiana. [9] [2]
Prunus × arnoldiana is a hybrid species of Prunus discovered growing on the grounds of the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University. It is a cross of flowering plum, Prunus triloba, and cherry plum, Prunus cerasifera. [1] One of its parents was initially thought to be Prunus tomentosa. [2]
The 1835 publication of that name by Gilbert Thomas Burnett (Burnett) is invalid because it lacks a description (or diagnosis or reference to an earlier description or diagnosis). Paul Fedorowitsch Horaninow (Horan.) published the name in 1847, but Amygdaloideae, published in 1832 by George Arnott Walker-Arnott , has priority and is therefore ...