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Pyrus
Family: Rosaceae
Pyrus image
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The Morton Arboretum
Small tree, rarely a shrub Leaves: alternate, stalked, with small stipules falling early, toothed or non-toothed, rarely lobed, margins rolled toward upper surface of midrib when in bud, usually hairless and glossy, becoming stiff when mature. Flowers: usually bisexual, white to pinkish, borne in clusters, with 20 to 30 stamens, usually red anthers, a single pistil, two to five styles, an inferior ovary that is constricted at the base, and two to five two-ovuled chambers. Sepals: five, fused into an urn-shaped tube with reflexed or spreading lobes. Petals: five, nearly circular to inversely egg-shaped, clawed. Fruit: fleshy with a core (pome), usually pear-shaped (pyriform), containing black to nearly black seeds. Twigs: sometimes thorny. Buds: pointed, hairless or nearly so, with overlapping scales.

Flowering: spring, before or with the leaves

Habitat and ecology: Old fields, pastures, waste ground, and railroad right-of-ways. Pyrus species sometimes escape from cultivation into natural areas.

Occurence in the Chicago region: non-native

Notes: Pyrus is a taxonomically confusing genus which sometimes includes Malus, and occasionally includes Sorbus and Aronia.

Etymology: Pyrus is the Latin name for pear.

Author: The Morton Arboretum

Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Hypanthium globose to obovoid; sep 5, ascending to spreading or recurved; pet 5, pink to white, elliptic to obovate, short-clawed; stamens 15-50, shorter than the pet; ovary inferior, 3-5-locular, the styles separate or connate below; fr a fleshy pome, each locule normally with 2 seeds; trees or shrubs, sometimes thorny, with simple, alternate, toothed or lobed lvs and large fls in the spring in simple umbels or umbel-like clusters on dwarf lateral branches (fr-spurs); x=17. Our native spp. hybridize with each other and with P. malus, and many specimens are hard to identify. Many cult. crab-apples are of hybrid origin. 60, N. Temp.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
Species within checklist: ASU Arboretum || << 1 - 50 taxa >>
Pyrus alpina
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Pyrus americana
Image of Pyrus americana
Pyrus amygdaliformis
Image of Pyrus amygdaliformis
Pyrus angustifolia
Image of Pyrus angustifolia
Pyrus aria
Image of Pyrus aria
Pyrus asiae-mediae
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Pyrus astracanica
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Pyrus aucuparia
Image of Pyrus aucuparia
Pyrus baccata
Image of Pyrus baccata
Pyrus betulifolia
Image of Pyrus betulifolia
Pyrus bourgaeana
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Pyrus bracteata
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Pyrus bretschneideri
Image of Pyrus bretschneideri
Pyrus brevipes
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Pyrus calleryana
Image of Pyrus calleryana
Pyrus carolinensis
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Pyrus caucasica
Image of Pyrus caucasica
Pyrus communis
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Pyrus cordata
Image of Pyrus cordata
Pyrus coronaria
Image of Pyrus coronaria
Pyrus decora
Image of Pyrus decora
Pyrus elaeagnifolia
Image of Pyrus elaeagnifolia
Pyrus fallax
Image of Pyrus fallax
Pyrus floribunda
Image of Pyrus floribunda
Pyrus fusca
Image of Pyrus fusca
Pyrus georgica
Image of Pyrus georgica
Pyrus glaucescens
Image of Pyrus glaucescens
Pyrus heterophylla
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Pyrus hybrida
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Pyrus ioensis
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Pyrus kawakamii
Image of Pyrus kawakamii
Pyrus korshinskyi
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Pyrus lancifolia
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Pyrus melanocarpa
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Pyrus microcarpa
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Pyrus mixta
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Pyrus nepalensis
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Pyrus nigra
Image of Pyrus nigra
Pyrus nivalis
Image of Pyrus nivalis
Pyrus pashia
Image of Pyrus pashia
Pyrus phaeocarpa
Image of Pyrus phaeocarpa
Pyrus pinnatifida
Image of Pyrus pinnatifida
Pyrus prunifolia
Image of Pyrus prunifolia
Pyrus pulcherrima
Image of Pyrus pulcherrima
Pyrus pumila
Image of Pyrus pumila
Pyrus pyraster
Image of Pyrus pyraster
Pyrus pyrifolia
Image of Pyrus pyrifolia
Pyrus regelii
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Pyrus rivularis
Image of Pyrus rivularis
Pyrus salicifolia
Image of Pyrus salicifolia
The National Science Foundation
Development supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)
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