Crataegus (sect. Coccineae) ser. Crus-galli

(Loudon) Rehder

Man. Cult. Trees ed. 2, 364. 1940.

Basionym: Crataegus sect. Crus-galli Loudon Arbor. Frutic. Brit. 2: 820. 1838
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 9. Treatment on page 536. Mentioned on page 516, 525, 526, 531, 532, 549, 606, 607, 628, 629.

Shrubs or trees, 10–100 dm, main trunk dominant (more commonly in taller plants). Stems: trunk bark older gray-ochre, usually fibrous, checked into longitudinal plates, freshly exposed bark not recorded; compound thorns on trunks (of larger individuals) usually present; twigs: new growth usually glabrous, sometimes pilose, 1-year old dark gray, pale brown, tan, brown, or orange-brown, 2-years old usually medium pale gray; thorns on twigs numerous, straight to recurved, sometimes reflexed, 2-years old dark gray to blackish or chestnut brown, medium to stout, (2–)3–6.5 cm. Leaves: petiole usually short, length 0–18(–31)% blade, usually glabrous, sometimes villous or glabrescent, usually eglandular, sometimes glandular; blade paler green abaxially, bright, glossy, deep green adaxially, narrowly oblanceolate to obovate, sometimes elliptic or ± rhombic, 2–7 cm (usually much longer than wide), usually coriaceous, sometimes thin and firm, base cuneate, tapered, or narrowed, lobes 0 or 1–3 per side, sinuses shallow, lobe apex acute, margins usually finely and evenly serrate, sometimes crenate, except near bases, or toothed only in distal part, venation semicamptodromous to craspedodromous, veins 4–6(–9) per side, apex acute to obtuse, rarely rounded, short-pointed, surfaces glabrous or hairy. Inflorescences 5–20-flowered; branches glabrous or hairy, sparsely glandular-punctate; bracteoles caducous (not seen in C. schizophylla), narrow, membranous, margins sparsely glandular. Flowers (8–)10–20 mm diam.; hypanthium glabrous, pilose, or villous; sepals narrowly triangular, much shorter than petals, margins entire or irregularly glandular-serrate; stamens 10–20, anthers ivory, cream, pink, dark purple, or red; styles 1–5. Pomes rose to deep red, sometimes orange-red, rarely yellow, suborbicular to ± oblong, (7–)8–15 mm diam., glabrous or pubescent; flesh hard, becoming mealy; sepals usually spreading to reflexed; pyrenes 1–5.

Distribution

North America, Mexico, introduced in Europe.

Discussion

Species 7 (5 in the flora).

Members of ser. Crus-galli are common hawthorns to the east of a line from central Texas to southern Minnesota and have a southeastern limit in north-central Florida. Members of ser. Crus-galli are less shade-tolerant than most American hawthorns of the southeast, rarely succeeding in woodland understory.

Members of ser. Crus-galli are usually recognized by their rather narrow leaves more or less coriaceous, shiny, fairly dark green, lobes absent, usually short-petiolate strongly tapered to the base, and rather late anthesis relative to sympatric hawthorns. The caducous bracteoles resemble those of ser. Virides in being especially narrow and often sparsely glandular. Sporadic yellow-fruited variants, some of which have been named, are well known in this series.

Series Crus-galli constitutes one of the most distinctive groups of hawthorns, but taxonomy of the species is difficult. A large range of variation is subsumed in Crataegus crus-galli, less in species like C. fecunda. E. J. Palmer (1925) cited well over 100 names for the series (C. persimilis, which keys out in the second couplet below, is an interserial hybrid). Stamen number and anther color in the more common species as interpreted here are rather inconstant compared to those in many Crataegus series. Rare putative hybrids with ser. Punctatae and ser. Virides are known. The distinctive C. ×permixta E. J. Palmer, from Illinois and Missouri, was placed in ser. Crus-galli by Palmer (1952), but its very broad and somewhat lobed leaves suggest hybridity with ser. Virides.

Selected References

None.

Key

1 Sepal margins subentire or shallowly to deeply glandular-serrate; petiole length 25+% blade > 2
1 Sepal margins ± entire; petiole length to 20% blade > 3
2 Young leaves adaxially scabrous; leaf apices acute; sepal margins subentire or glandular-serrate; pyrene sides plane; 1-year old twigs orange-brown. Crataegus fecunda
2 Young leaves adaxially glabrous except for midvein; leaf apices broadly acute; sepal margins deeply glandular-serrate; pyrene sides plane to deeply excavated; 1-year old twigs purplish brown. Crataegus persimilis
3 Leaves hairy adaxially young, glabrescent or becoming scabrous; inflorescence branches densely pubescent. Crataegus berberifolia
3 Leaves glabrous or sparsely hairy adaxially young, except sometimes for hairy midveins; inflorescence branches usually glabrous > 4
4 Most short-shoot leaf lobes 1–3 per side. Crataegus schizophylla
4 Short-shoot leaf lobes 0 > 5
5 Leaf blades ± orbiculate to broadly elliptic; styles and pyrenes (1–)3–5. Crataegus reverchonii
5 Leaf blades broadly spatulate to narrowly oblanceolate or narrowly elliptic; styles and pyrenes 1 or 2(or 3). Crataegus crus-galli