Family: Rosaceae
Canadian plum
[Prunus americana var. lanata Marshall, more... ]
Forests of sugar maple-basswood, oak-hickory, hickory-basswood-white ash, maple-birch-hemlock, red pine-aspen, oak-basswood; clay bluffs, river flats, stream terraces, thickets. Rather uncommon and local, with most of our specimens coming from a small portion of the Driftless Area, the southeast counties, the northeast counties near Green Bay, and north central Wisconsin; scattered elsewhere. The distribution of P. nigra in the state deserves more attention. The flowers are often pinkish tinged compared to the white or off-white color of P. americana.
Etymology: Prunus: ancient Latin name for the plum
Plants: perennial tree
Conservation Status: Native
Plants: perennial tree
Conservation Status: Native
- tall shrub or small tree
- branches bearing stout spines
- flowers white, occassionally streaked with pink, 1-3(4) in sessile umbels
- petals 9-14 mm
- margins of sepals lined with glands or glandular serrations
- leaves less than or equal to twice as long as wide
- leaf serrations rounded and with a dark sessile gland embedded in the summit
- fruit 2-3 cm diam.
Floristic Rating: Coefficient of Conservatism = 6, Wetland Indicator = FACU- USDA Plants Database: Federal Distribution and detailed information including photos University of Wisconsin - Green Bay: Trees: Photos, descriptions, information USDA Agricultural Research Service (ARS): Images of seeds, fruits, embryos, etc.