Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Arctostaphylos patula

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Ericaceae

Scientific name
  
Arctostaphylos patula

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Ericales

Genus
  
Arctostaphylos

Higher classification
  
Arctostaphylos

Arctostaphylos patula CalPhotos Arctostaphylos patula Greenleaf Manzanita

Similar
  
Arctostaphylos, Arctostaphylos nevadensis, Arctostaphylos viscida, Arctostaphylos columbiana, Arctostaphylos parryana

Arctostaphylos patula is a species of manzanita known by the common name greenleaf manzanita. This manzanita is native to western North America where it grows in coniferous forests at moderate to high elevations.

Contents

Arctostaphylos patula CalPhotos

Distribution

Arctostaphylos patula Southwest Colorado Wildflowers Arctostaphylos patula

The distribution of Arctostaphylos patula is one of the most broad of the manzanitas, spanning most of western North America. Its northern edge is in Washington state, eastern edge in Colorado, western edge the North American coast, and southern most edge in Baja California, Mexico. It spans in elevation from about 1,500 to 12,000 feet.

Description

Arctostaphylos patula Arctostaphylos patula Greenleaf Manzanita

This shrub reaches between 1 and 2 meters in height. It is low to the ground with some of the lower branches rooting in the soil and others extending more outward than upward. The stems are twisting and reddish-brown in color, and shiny due to glandular secretion. The petioles may sometimes have clear-to-glandular hairs. The leaves are oval-shaped to nearly round, and flat, shiny, and smooth. They are 6 centimeters long and four wide at maximum.

Arctostaphylos patula Arctostaphylos patula Greenleaf Manzanita

The plentiful flowers are white to pink and urn-shaped, each with five small lobes at the mouth of the corolla, hanging in bunches. The fruits are dark brown drupes nearly a centimeter wide, each containing about five hard-coated seeds that can be fused. Seeds are primarily dispersed by seed-caching mammals, and sometimes the fruits are consumed and dispersed by medium-to-large mammals such as bears, coyotes, coatis, and foxes. Seeds require fire followed by cold conditions to germinate; seeds can remain dormant in soil for hundreds of years.

Greenleaf manzanitas in some areas, but not all, produce lignotubers, from which they can reproduce vegetatively.

Uses

Some Plateau Indian tribes drank a tea of greenleaf manzanita as a cathartic.

Arctostaphylos patula Arctostaphylos patula Greenleaf Manzanita

Arctostaphylos patula Greenleaf Manzanita Arctostaphylos patula Pacific northwest

Arctostaphylos patula httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

References

Arctostaphylos patula Wikipedia