Rosa minutifolia
Accessed.Carol Bornstein, David Fross, Bart O'Brien 2007. "California Native Plants for the Garden". Cachuma Press. (paperback) (hardcover). pp 173Baldwin, B. G., D. H. Goldman, D. J. Keil, R. Patterson, T. J. Rosatti, and D. H. Wilken, editors. 2012. "The Jepson Manual: vascular plants of California", second edition. University of California press, Berkeley. is a species in the genus Rosa. It is also known by the common names Baja rose, Baja littleleaf rose, and small-leaved rose.
Height/spread: 30–100 cm (1m) high and wide.
Stems: Stems are low and arching, with many, generally unpaired, straight, slender prickles measuring 2-12mm in length.
Leaves: The leaves of Rosa minutifolia are the smallest of the genus Rose, with the terminal leaflets measuring 3-6mm long and wide. Leaves are round, widest near the middle, tip shape to Leaf shape, with toothed margins about halfway to the midvein, glandless. The leaf axil is finely short-hairy and sparsely glandular. Leaflets are hairy and number 5-7.
Flowers: Inflorescences are generally one-flowered, pedicels are hairy and glandless, and measure to about 2-10mm in length. Flowers have a hypanthium to around 3mm wide. Densely prickly neck to 2mm wide. Sepals have toothed lateral lobes and are glandless, with the tip generally being about equal to the body, which is also toothed. Flowers typically contain 10 pistils each. Petals measure 10-20mm and are deep pink, pale pink, or rarely white. Flowers appear in late winter, February–April. R. minutifolia is the earliest flowering of native California roses.
Fruit: Fruit shape is typically spherical, about 5mm in width. Sepals persistent, erect to spreading; unknown.
The name Rosa minutifolia was previously disputed, as some believed it to be in its own genus, Hesperhodos. However, the name has since been resolved.
|
|