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Rosaceae
Rosaceae image
Sue Carnahan
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JANAS 33(1)
LEAVES: alternate (except Coleogyne), stipulate, simple to compound or dissected. PLANT: Plants herbaceous or woody. INFLORESCENCE: usually more or less cymose. FLOWERS: perfect, actinomorphic, often bearing 5 bracteoles; hypanthium bearing sepals, petals, and stamens; sepals usually 5; petals usually 5, distinct, often showy; stamens usually 10 many in whorls of 5; receptacle sometimes enlarged; pistils 1 many, each of 1 5 carpels, the ovaries superior to inferior. FRUIT: an achene, follicle, drupe, pome, hip, aggregate or accessory. x = 7 9, 14 17. NOTES: Ca. 100 genera, ca. 3,000 spp., worldwide, concentrated in temperate and subtropical n. hemisphere. Many cultivated for fruits (Fragaria, Malus, Prunus, Pyrus, Rubus, etc.) and as ornamentals (Crataegus, Pyracantha, Rosa, Sorbus, Spiraea, etc.). REFERENCES: Brasher, Jeffrey W. 2001. Rosaceae. J. Ariz. - Nev. Acad. Sci. Volume 33(1).
Species within checklist: Walnut Canyon National Monument
Agrimonia gryposepala
Image of Agrimonia gryposepala
Agrimonia striata
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Amelanchier utahensis
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Cercocarpus montanus
Image of Cercocarpus montanus
Chamaebatiaria millefolium
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Fallugia paradoxa
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Ivesia multifoliolata
Image of Ivesia multifoliolata
Malus pumila
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Petrophyton caespitosum
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Petrophytum caespitosum
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Potentilla crinita
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Potentilla norvegica
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Potentilla thurberi
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Prunus virginiana
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Purshia stansburiana
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Purshia stansburyana
Image of Purshia stansburyana
Rosa odorata
Image of Rosa odorata
Rubus neomexicanus
Image of Rubus neomexicanus
Sanguisorba minor
Image of Sanguisorba minor
The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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