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Malus floribunda, common name Japanese flowering crabapple, [1] [2] Japanese crab, [3] purple chokeberry, [2] or showy crabapple, [2] originates from Japan and East Asia. It may be a hybrid of M. toringo with M. baccata , in which case it would be written as Malus × floribunda .
Malus (/ ˈ m eɪ l ə s / [3] or / ˈ m æ l ə s /) is a genus of about 32–57 species [4] of small deciduous trees or shrubs in the family Rosaceae, including the domesticated orchard apple, crab apples (sometimes known in North America as crabapples) and wild apples.
The wild apple is a deciduous small to medium-sized tree, but can also grow into a multi-stemmed bush. It can live 80–100 years and grow up to 14 metres (46 feet) tall with trunk diameters of usually 23–45 centimetres (9– 17 + 1 ⁄ 2 inches), although diameters exceeding 90 cm (35 in) have been recorded. [2]
Pristine apple, is one of the scab-resistant cultivars, to be developed by "PRI", hence its name "PRI"stine.. By 2000, the PRI have already released a total of eighteen apple cultivars, containing the scab-resistant Vf gene derived from Malus floribunda 821.
Features used to distinguish the species include: [4] [5] the shape of the leaf blade (see above), their length-width ratio (0.7-1.9), the shape of the margins, an acute to acuminate apex, and two or three conspicuously large hair tufts at the petiole insertion of the lower surface (except in the Solomon Islands and East Papua New Guinea ...
Dasiphora fruticosa ssp. floribunda (N) Dasistoma macrophylla (N) Datura stramonium (I) Datura wrightii (N) Daucus carota (I) Decodon verticillatus (N) Delphinium exaltatum (N) Delphinium tricorne (N) Dennstaedtia punctilobula (N) Deparia acrostichoides (N) Deschampsia cespitosa (N) Deschampsia danthonioides (N) Deschampsia flexuosa var ...
It was a seedling produced in 1955 from pollinating 'Macoun' from 'Purdue 54-12' for the sake of acquiring Malus floribunda disease resistances. It was first released to the public in 1978. It was first released to the public in 1978.
Malus floribunda, native to eastern Asia and cultivated as an ornamental Index of plants with the same common name This page is an index of articles on plant species (or higher taxonomic groups) with the same common name ( vernacular name).