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#1
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I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts
I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#2
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![]() "Stewart Robert Hinsley" wrote in message ... I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html -- I think it could be ******* service tree. |
#3
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In sci.bio.botany Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
: I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts : I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? : http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html : -- : Stewart Robert Hinsley It is certainly not Sorbus intermedia. It looks very much like Sorbus hybrida. If it were in Finland, it would certainly be hybrida, but there are other similar species elsewhere in Europe. -- Erkki 'Örkki' Aalto "Life is divided up into Internet: the horrible and the miserable" Snail: Tietotekniikkaosasto, P.O. Box 64 FI-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland |
#4
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On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 15:39:46 +0100, Stewart Robert Hinsley
wrote: I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html Whitebeam doesn't have cut leaves like on the photo. I'd go with Christina's Service Tree suggestion but I'm not sure which variety it could be. Chris R. |
#5
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Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html Where geographically are you? There are a number (15 - 20 ?) of sorbus microspecies around the UK (S. bristoliensis, S. Willmotiana, S. Devoniensis .....), with a variety of leaf shapes. Your locality might be as good an indicator as anything else .... -- Larry Stoter |
#6
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Cheb wrote:
On Thu, 12 Jun 2008 15:39:46 +0100, Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote: I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html Whitebeam doesn't have cut leaves like on the photo. I'd go with Christina's Service Tree suggestion but I'm not sure which variety it could be. I am reasonably sure it's ******* Service Tree. Everything about the leaf fits and the colour of the shoot is right. I'm not an expert, though, could easily be wrong ;-) |
#7
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In message , Stewart Robert Hinsley
writes I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html Thanks everyone for your suggestions. My newsfeed was down most of today, but in the interim I've added some more observations and photographs to the blog. Same URL. http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html There are 4 Sorbus found in the UK which have free basal leaflets - Sorbus x thuringiaca (******* service tree = aucuparia x aria), Sorbus x liljeforsii (aucuparia x intermedia), Sorbus hybrida (Swedish service tree) and Sorbus pseudofennica (Arran service tree). (Note: these plants may be service trees, but they're still whitebeams in my idiolect.) None of the other British endemics have, fide Stace, free basal leaflets, nor are they known to occur in this area; the only Sorbus recorded wild from the hectad (up to 2000) are aucuparia, aria (agg.) and latifolia. (So confirmation that I also ran across torminalis today would be nice.) The first three taxa have scattered records over the British Isles. (Sorbus x thuringica is about twice as common as the other two.) Sorbus x thuringiaca and Sorbus x liljeforsii would be expected to have more free basal leaflets and more lateral veins that the plant I encounted; hence my second thoughts that it was Sorbus hybrida, rather than my original misidentification on cursory examination as Sorbus intermedia. The number of basal leaflets is low even for Sorbus hybrida, so I was concerned about the possibility of some other taxon irregularly producing leaves with free basal leaflets, perhaps especially when young. As today I encountered additional plants with (0)-1-2 basal leaflets my concerns are somewhat alleviated. -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
#8
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Stewart Robert Hinsley wrote:
In message , Stewart Robert Hinsley writes I came across this whitebeam sapling yesterday, but on second thoughts I'm not sure what it is. Any ideas? http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html Thanks everyone for your suggestions. My newsfeed was down most of today, but in the interim I've added some more observations and photographs to the blog. Same URL. http://florulaurbana.blogspot.com/20...m-is-this.html There are 4 Sorbus found in the UK which have free basal leaflets - Sorbus x thuringiaca (******* service tree = aucuparia x aria), Sorbus x liljeforsii (aucuparia x intermedia), Sorbus hybrida (Swedish service tree) and Sorbus pseudofennica (Arran service tree). (Note: these plants may be service trees, but they're still whitebeams in my idiolect.) None of the other British endemics have, fide Stace, free basal leaflets, nor are they known to occur in this area; the only Sorbus recorded wild from the hectad (up to 2000) are aucuparia, aria (agg.) and latifolia. (So confirmation that I also ran across torminalis today would be nice.) The first three taxa have scattered records over the British Isles. (Sorbus x thuringica is about twice as common as the other two.) Sorbus x thuringiaca and Sorbus x liljeforsii would be expected to have more free basal leaflets and more lateral veins that the plant I encounted; hence my second thoughts that it was Sorbus hybrida, rather than my original misidentification on cursory examination as Sorbus intermedia. The number of basal leaflets is low even for Sorbus hybrida, so I was concerned about the possibility of some other taxon irregularly producing leaves with free basal leaflets, perhaps especially when young. As today I encountered additional plants with (0)-1-2 basal leaflets my concerns are somewhat alleviated. If I am reading correctly Hugh McAllister in _The Genus Sorbus_ has S. hybrida found in Britain. I'm certainly no expert on identifying within the genus, though. It's extremely complicated taxonomically. We should note however that McAllister (Kew, 2005) separates the whitebeams, previously Sorbus Aria etc, into a species distinct from the other Sorbus, calling it Aria. I'm not sure whether this distinction has been accepted internationally or not. The Sorbus all have pinnate leaves, the Aria entire leaves. -E |
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