Identification: Atsumori - double pink mid-season, small

Discussion in 'Ornamental Cherries' started by Douglas Justice, Apr 17, 2008.

  1. Douglas Justice

    Douglas Justice Well-Known Member UBC Botanical Garden Forums Administrator Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout Maple Society 10 Years

    Messages:
    980
    Likes Received:
    66
    Location:
    Vancouver, Canada
    [editied by wcutler: This thread started as "What cherry". This has been identified now as P. x subhirtella 'Atsumori'.]

    I'm hoping that someone will help with this identification. This individual on West 14th is unlike other cherries I've seen. It most closely matches the description of 'Oshidori', which is reputed to be a Prunus incisa hybrid. The leaves certainly have that look (very stout and coarsely serrated), but the flowers don't have the requisite (albeit occasional) extra carpels and the petals seem more "regular" and rounded.

    Note the bulbous calyx tube, and hairy calyx, pedicels and petioles. The youngest shoots are also sparsely pubescent. The flowers are no more than 3 cm in diameter. The tree looks to be about 30 years old and is about 5m tall. There is some evidence of brown rot and bacterial canker.
     

    Attached Files:

    Last edited by a moderator: Apr 17, 2008
  2. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

    Messages:
    21,279
    Likes Received:
    792
    Location:
    WA USA (Z8)
    Re: what cherry? double pink mid-season, small

    P. x subhirtella 'Atsumori'?
     
  3. Douglas Justice

    Douglas Justice Well-Known Member UBC Botanical Garden Forums Administrator Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout Maple Society 10 Years

    Messages:
    980
    Likes Received:
    66
    Location:
    Vancouver, Canada
    Re: what cherry? double pink mid-season, small

    Thank you, Ron.

    Until now, the name was completely unfamiliar to me. I believe it may be the correct one. I had originally discounted P. x subhirtella because this tree always blooms mid April, which is considerably later than other Higan cherries in Vancouver. None of my cherry references is particularly good with P. x subhirtella, except Jacobson, North American Landscape Trees, and that's a resource I've obviously been neglecting (where I found the description, which is spot-on).

    By the way, how did you do that? Do you know of any specimens near you? pictures?
     
  4. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

    Messages:
    21,279
    Likes Received:
    792
    Location:
    WA USA (Z8)
    Re: what cherry? double pink mid-season, small

    Remembered seeing a pretty double Higan cherry in Victoria when I went there years ago with Jacobson's notes of locations for interesting Prunus, but had long forgotten the name of it. Looked under P. x subhirtella in North American Landscape Trees to recover cultivar name. Description there seemed like it might be what was in your pictures.

    Curiously, it does not seem to be mentioned here:

    http://www.arthurleej.com/a-victoriarosetrees.html
     
  5. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

    Messages:
    21,279
    Likes Received:
    792
    Location:
    WA USA (Z8)
    Mailed a link to this thread to Jacobson for comment. Turns out the description of 'Atsumori' Douglas and I both mentioned using here is based on my own notes! Here is his reply, in part:

    the description in NALT* was almost verbatim from notes you supplied me, based on specimens you saw in Victoria on Vancouver Street, and Pengergast east of Heywood.
    Typical subhirtella has constricted calyx tubes, while incisa does
    not. This Vancouver clone has unconstricted calyces, and may be P.
    incisa 'Plena'. But the double subhirtella clones such as Fukubana
    have stouter calyx tubes


    *North American Landscape Trees
     
    Last edited: Apr 18, 2008
  6. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

    Messages:
    10,867
    Likes Received:
    2,281
    Location:
    Vancouver, BC Canada
    Well, we have a "not a ukon" thread. Should we have a "not an atsumori" one, or what should I do about the thread title?
     
  7. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

    Messages:
    21,279
    Likes Received:
    792
    Location:
    WA USA (Z8)
    The next step would be to see if the Vancouver tree and any surviving examples there may be in Victoria are the same. As I remember it when I looked at 'Atsumori' there in the early 90's the ones I saw were all comparatively small street trees, that could easily have died since then. Meanwhile, because the NALT description appears to fit the Vancouver tree it seems perfectly acceptable to keep calling it (and the thread) 'Atsumori'.
     
    Last edited: Apr 18, 2008
  8. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

    Messages:
    10,867
    Likes Received:
    2,281
    Location:
    Vancouver, BC Canada
    I just found one of these in Stanley Park, just to the north of the golf course entrance. I'm including blossom size closeups.

    20080421_LagoonDr_Atsumori_Cutler_4222r.jpg 20080421_LagoonDr_Atsumori_Cutler_4230r.jpg
    20080421_LagoonDr_Atsumori_Cutler_4238cr.jpg 20080421_LagoonDr_Atsumori_Cutler_4233cr2.jpg
     
  9. JenD

    JenD Active Member 10 Years

    Messages:
    52
    Likes Received:
    2
    Location:
    Duncan BC Canada
  10. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

    Messages:
    10,867
    Likes Received:
    2,281
    Location:
    Vancouver, BC Canada
    I missed doing a timely posting of this 'Atsumori' in Stanley Park, so I may as well add them here, since there are not a lot of photos of this. On the Victoria photos, I can't see the sepals, which to me are very distinctive. I notice that the pistils are often quite a bit longer than the stamens on the Victoria trees and on this one.
     

    Attached Files:

Share This Page