Page 4: 70 results for prunus
-
Sighting: Prunus pensylvanica at 42.417, -72.520
Sighting: Prunus pensylvanica at 42.417, -72.520 Posted Oct. 17, 2013, 7:09 p.m. by Student20 Description or comments: lack of red hair under leaves; disturbed habitat; elongated leaves
-
Sighting: Prunus serotina at Charlton, Massachusetts
Sighting: Prunus serotina at Charlton, Massachusetts Posted Sept. 14, 2013, 6:57 p.m. by Student43 Description or comments: deciduous, alternate, elliptical and finely serrated; very strong sm...
-
Question: Dear Ace Botanist; Please identify this tree that volunteered in our garden. …
...of Prunus (cherry, plum). I would not be able to tell you which species without flowers/fruits, but it looks like a cultivar of Prunus serrulata (Japanese flowering cherry). Best wishes.
-
Question: Dear Botanist, I have two Prunus americana in my back garden and …
Question: Dear Botanist, I have two Prunus americana in my back garden and am worried about how hard they will be to maintain and how large they will get (shooting sucker babies all over the place). ...
-
Question: I think this may be something in the genus Prunus, based on …
...of Prunus and, based on the leaf color and shape it suggests an open-grown, sprouting, Prunus virginiana (choke cherry). I cannot be certain without a specimen in hand, but this is what the photograp...
-
Question: ...Last Ones For Now
...of Prunus (peach, plum, cherry), but I would need to know where you photographed this and what setting (wild or cultivated) to help any further). The second image is of the flowers of Rumex acetosell...
-
Sighting: Arctostaphylos uva-ursi at 41.73861, -70.38667
...velutina, Prunus serotina, and Deschampsia flexuosa. Location notes: Secondary dunes to west of Sandy Neck Road on Sandwich Conservation Lands.
-
Question: Please help with identifying this was taken at Humarock beach in the …
...be Prunus maritima var. maritima (beach plum), a shrub of the coastal plain. The dark blue fruits are typical of this species in the fall season.
-
Sighting: Prunus persica at Pine Hill Road, Chelmsford, MA
Sighting: Prunus persica at Pine Hill Road, Chelmsford, MA Posted Nov. 8, 2015, 9:43 p.m. by dcalenda Location notes: Next to the intersection of Lady Slipper Lane and Pine Hill Road, where ...
-
Question: Hi, I recently discovered this sapling growing at the edge of the …
Question: Hi, I recently discovered this sapling growing at the edge of the woods behind my back yard, and I am wondering if it is Prunus persica? There is a compost pile nearby from which a seed coul...