Crataegus okanaganensis var. okanaganensis

IllustratedEndemic
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 9. Treatment on page 505.

Leaves ± bronze in fall; blade ± ovate to ovate-rhombic, lobes well defined. Pomes pendent, ovoid.


Phenology: Flowering May; fruiting late Aug–Sep.
Habitat: Natural hedgerows and mesic brush, mainly in valley bottoms
Elevation: 400–700 m

Discussion

Variety okanaganensis is somewhat like Crataegus williamsii of northwestern Montana both in leaf shape and fruit shape, but it has glossier, more coriaceous leaves with the color often yellowish green in mid season, the blades proportionately wider, usually with less acute lobes, stouter thorns, different anther color, and a different fruiting calyx. The young fruit is brilliant red when C. williamsii is usually a pale to deeper dull red; mature fruits are deep purple instead of blood or deep red. Northern Idaho specimens of C. okanaganensis flower about a week before C. williamsii in northwestern Montana. Apparent intermediates with var. wellsii occur.

Selected References

None.

Lower Taxa

None.