Puneet Varma (Editor)

Bursera laxiflora

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Burseraceae

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Sapindales

Genus
  
Bursera

Similar
  
Bursera penicillata, Bursera bipinnata, Bursera fagaroides, Bursera microphylla, Bursera glabrifolia

Bursera laxiflora is a North American species of trees in the Frankincense Family in the soapwood order, native to northwestern Mexico. It is fairly common in Sonora (including Tiburón Island) with additional populations in Sinaloa, Baja California Sur, and Socorro Island. There is a report of the species being found in the United States, but it is from the property of the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum west of Tucson, most likely a cultivated or escaped specimen.

Bursera laxiflora is a small tree with red bark unlike the gray bark of the closely related B. filicifolia. The trunk can reach a diameter of up to 30 cm (12 inches). Leaves are pinnately compound with 5-9 leaflets, with short hairs on both sides. Drupes are egg-shaped and somewhat flattened.

References

Bursera laxiflora Wikipedia