Ceanothus dentatus

Torrey & A. Gray

Fl. N. Amer. 1: 268. 1838.

Common names: Cropleaf ceanothus
Endemic
Synonyms: Ceanothus dentatus subsp. floribundus (Hooker) Trelease C. floribundus Hooker
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 12. Treatment on page 92. Mentioned on page 80, 91.

Shrubs, evergreen, 0.5–1.5 m. Stems erect, ascending or spreading, not rooting at nodes; branchlets brown to reddish brown, not thorn-tipped, round in cross section, rigid, puberulent. Leaves: petiole 1–2 mm; blade flat to cupped, narrowly elliptic to narrowly oblong or linear, 5–16 × 2–8 mm, base obtuse, margins obscurely glandular-denticulate, strongly revolute, glands 14–36, apex truncate to retuse, abaxial surface pale green, villosulous to strigillose, especially on veins, adaxial surface dark green, strigillose, not glandular papillate; pinnately veined, veins not furrowed. Inflorescences axillary or terminal, racemelike, 1.5–3 cm. Flowers: sepals, petals, and nectary deep blue. Capsules 2.5–4 mm wide, not lobed to weakly lobed; valves smooth, crested or not.


Phenology: Flowering Mar–Jun.
Habitat: Sandy soils, slopes, flats, maritime chaparral, cypress and pine forests.
Elevation: 0–50 m.

Discussion

Ceanothus dentatus is a narrow endemic, restricted to the Monterey Bay region. Some specimens of this species have been mistaken for C. papillosus. Papillose glands are restricted to leaf blade margins and are absent from adaxial leaf surfaces in C. dentatus, but are evenly distributed over the adaxial leaf surfaces in C. papillosus. Putative hybrids between C. dentatus and C. griseus have been named C. ×lobbianus Hooker (M. Van Rensselaer and H. McMinn 1942).

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.
... more about "Ceanothus dentatus"
Clifford L. Schmidt† +  and Dieter H. Wilken +
Torrey & A. Gray +
Cropleaf ceanothus +
0–50 m. +
Sandy soils, slopes, flats, maritime chaparral, cypress and pine forests. +
Flowering Mar–Jun. +
Fl. N. Amer. +
Ceanothus dentatus subsp. floribundus +  and C. floribundus +
Ceanothus dentatus +
Ceanothus subg. Ceanothus +
species +