What crabapple ?

Discussion in 'Plants: Identification' started by David Tang, Jul 24, 2021.

  1. David Tang

    David Tang Active Member

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    All taken at Garry Point Park, Richmond.
    The flowers were taken in late April this year.
    The ping ball sized fruits were taken this morning
    from the same tree, 15-18 feet tall.
    I know these are crabapples, but fail in ID the species.
     

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  2. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    I'm just commenting on these thrilling photos!

    And also reminding you that for IDs, it often helps to also see a "habit photo" - one that shows the shape of the whole tree or plant. Sometimes for related trees, flowers and fruits can look similar, but the shape of the tree can clearly rule out some candidates, or suggest likely IDs.
     
  3. David Tang

    David Tang Active Member

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    Need to wait. Can't haul too many lens. I had a tele on tripod
    and a macro for closeup. None in between !
     
  4. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    Hundreds of cultivars have been selected and distributed. And the process continues to this day.
     
  5. David Tang

    David Tang Active Member

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    Here is the whole tree. Hope it can help.
     

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  6. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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    Well, at least you have the whole set here. With so many cultivars, even many of them with pink flowers, it's unlikely anyone would venture to name one. Of the crab apples listed in the Vancouver Trees app, it doesn't really match anything. The closest would be Malus 'Prairifire', but the pomes (apples) don't look right, and websites don't even list what species that cultivar comes from, since it's a hybrid from more than one species. Also that reminds me to tell you to add to your list of what info to provide: the size of the fruits and size of the leaves.

    I don't know who in the city would have the list of trees - maybe you can get a city arborist email address and ask them to look at your photos and tell you if they have the cultivar name. And then you'd have to believe that it was properly named when it came in, which is not always the case. Some day, you might come across a similar-looking tree with a label! And then you'd have to name your photos "similar to Malus 'cultivar name' ".

    Actually, it's such a wild-looking area, it might not have even been deliberately planted, could be a seedling from an apple eaten by a visitor, in which case it would not even have a name even if the name of the eaten apple were known.

    Unless you're trying to purchase the same tree, I think "Crab apple, pink flowers, purple fruits" should do for your description.
     
  7. David Tang

    David Tang Active Member

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    Thanks for enlightening.
    Just to add my 2 cents, if it is sweet, it's crab apple, if otherwise,
    it is crap apple. I seriously think the name was initially crap apple
    until someone find sweet ones, then it is eulogize into crab apple.
     
  8. wcutler

    wcutler Paragon of Plants Forums Moderator VCBF Cherry Scout 10 Years

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  9. Ron B

    Ron B Paragon of Plants 10 Years

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    Agree that growing situation of the example asked about here implies that it arose spontaneously from seed. And is therefore not a named horticultural selection (unless the probably very small chance that somebody else noticed this same original individual, cloned it and put it on the market with its own name actually occurred). A pertinent aspect would be if there is anything else visible on the site that suggests it used to be a habitation or other situation where cultivated trees may have been present.
     
    Last edited: Jul 26, 2021
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