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   » » Wiki: Rhus Ovata
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Rhus ovata, commonly known as sugar bush or sugar sumac, is a or small found growing in the canyons and slopes of the and related ecosystems in Southern California, , and Baja California Sur. It is a long lived-plant, up to 100 years, and has dense evergreen foliage that make it conspicuous. It is closely related to and hybridizes with the lemonade sumac.


Description

Morphology
This plant is a tall, wide woody to small that ranges in height from with a rounded appearance. The stout are thick and reddish when young. The is suspended on a petiole 10–30 mm long. The leaves are 3 to 8 cm long, and roughly the same size in width, shaped broadly ovate to broadly elliptic, folded at the midrib, and have a leathery, glabrous texture. The leaf tips range from acute to acuminate, and the leaf margins are entire. File:2014-12-23-14.55.04 ZS PMax Rhus ovata-1 (15904485348).jpg|Detail of buds File:Rhusovata1.jpg|Flower buds at a later stage. File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 66465914 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Another example of flower buds File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 67857333 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Flowering File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 125941928 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Flowering, note the clustered flowers File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 40242200 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Emerging fruits The are small, less than 1 cm wide, composed of 5 white to pink and 5 reddish with ciliate margins. They are and self-incompatible. Some plants may only have female flowers, others may be with bisexual flowers, and some with a combination of both male-sterile female flowers and bisexual flowers. The flowers occur clustered on branched at the end of current seasonal branches. The branches of the inflorescence are stout, with the being less than 2 mm large. The is a reddish, hairy and sticky , 3–5 mm long and 6–8 mm in diameter, with a flattened appearance, producing a single surrounded by a stony . Male-sterile plants tend to set the most fruits.Young, D. A. (1972). The reproductive biology of Rhus integrifolia and Rhus ovata (Anacardiaceae). Evolution, 406–14.


Taxonomy

Phylogeny and hybridization
Over 20 species in the genus occur in , , and . analysis based on numerous traits placed Rhus ovata in the section Styphonia, alongside Rhus integrifolia, the lemonade sumac. Both plants are their closest relatives, and hybridize where their range overlaps, this overlap typically being in coastal mountains. Lemonade sumac tends to occur with a more western distribution along the coast and on islands, while sugar bush is typically found more inland and to the east, with both intergrading where they meet.

The two species diverged roughly 3 million years ago, and had several period of expanding and contracting distributions, with fossils being found as far north as Nevada. Species distribution modeling implies a future northward shift for the populations in Arizona, but ecosystems in California will likely remain stable into the future. However, human impact will likely continue to fracture suitable habitats as climate change affects human development, with some implications for gene flow and adaptation. A worst-case scenario of global climate change may even see R. ovata being pushed towards the coast by 2070.Barrett, C. F., Lambert, J., Santee, M. V., Sinn, B. T., Skibicki, S. V., Stephens, H. M., & Thixton, H. (2021). Genetic, morphological, and niche variation in the widely hybridizing Rhus integrifolia‐Rhus ovata species complex. Plant Species Biology, 36(1), 17–35.

The hybrids produced are a result due to the fact that both species are visited by the same pollinators. Hybrids possess morphological traits intermediate between both species. Research has shown that only 19% of interspecific crosses produced seeds, a much lower fertility rate compared to the 61% and 73% exhibited by crosses within species. The low fertility rate of hybrids indicates that they have a loss of fitness from their parents, suggesting that there is some incompatibility between the two species. Although hybrids may be sterile, populations of sugar bush have high levels of genetic diversity.


Etymology
The epithet ovata refers to the egg-shaped leaves present on the plant.


Distribution and habitat
The sugar bush is primarily located in inland localities, as it grades into its relative, the lemonade sumac, near the coast. However, it does occur on Santa Cruz and Catalina Island. It may be found throughout the inland mountains and foothills of Southern California, continuing southward through the Peninsular Ranges of San Diego County into northern , in the foothills and mountains of the Sierra de Juarez and the Sierra de San Pedro Martir. Further south, more disjunct distributions are found in the sky islands of the Central Desert of Baja California, primarily in the mountains of the Sierra La Asamblea and the Sierra San Borja. The southern limit occurs in Baja California Sur, on the Tres Virgenes volcano. The species is also found distantly in Arizona, on the .

The plant may be found along the slopes of canyons in the foothills of mountains, mostly in the and associated ecosystems. They are drought-tolerant plants, and even occur along the edges of the in the eastern foothills of the Peninsular Ranges. Their preferred soil types include well-drained mediums derived from both granitic and sedimentary materials, but not alkaline soils.


Ecology
The flowers bloom from March to May, and a variety of species may be seen visiting the flowers, including the Western honey bee and the black-tailed bumblebee, along with smaller bee genera such as , Perdita, , . After pollination, fruits mature over the summer and may be collected from July to August. They generally will fall onto the ground, forming a seed bank in the soil, but many will also remain on the plant into fall. Seeds may be consumed by the of .Keeley, J. E. (1977). Seed production, seed populations in soil, and seedling production after fire for two congeneric pairs of sprouting and nonsprouting chaparal shrubs. Ecology, 58(4), 820–29. File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 129674567 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Growing with Artemisia californica File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 1762888 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Growing with File:Sugar bush imported from iNaturalist photo 2984802 on 14 October 2021.jpg|Above a suburban environment The fruits and the seeds of Rhus species are generally dispersed by birds and mammals, and in the related Rhus integrifolia, many animals even dispersed fruits before they fell off the shrub. The larvae of the eurytomid wasps may predate up to 50% of the fallen seeds in the wild, with a singular larvae consuming the seed by entering, eating the entire interior, leaving an exit hole upon departure, which may be noticeable. Other interactors with the fruits include rodents and birds, who will also eat or disperse the seeds. Some rodents, like the dusky-footed woodrat, will strip and consume the bark of the plant, leaving entire branches bare. Pieces of the sugarbush form a minor portion of the food supply within wood-rat nests.Lloret, F. & Zedler, P. H. (1991). Recruitment pattern of Rhus integrifolia populations in periods between fire in chaparral. Journal of Vegetation Science, 2(2), 217–30.Horton, J. S., & Wright, J. T. (1944). The wood rat as an ecological factor in southern California watersheds. Ecology, 25(3), 341–51.


Uses

Ethnobotany
Rhus ovata was used by the to treat colds and coughs, by making a tea with the leaves. It was also used as food, by eating the fresh fruits raw, dried, or ground into mush. The Cahuilla were also reported to boiled flower cluster and consume them. There are unconfirmed reports that Rhus ovata contains , the chemical irritant in plants such as poison ivy. Rhus plants have been confirmed to contain flavones, cardanols, bichalcones, chemicals which may have antimicrobial properties,Mdee, L. K., Yeboah, S. O., & Abegaz, B. M. (2003). Rhuschalcones II− VI, Five New Bichalcones from the Root Bark of Rhus pyroides. Journal of natural products, 66(5), 599604.Reichling, J., Neuner, A., Sharaf, M., Harkenthal, M., & Schnitzler, P. (2009). Antiviral activity of Rhus aromatica (fragrant sumac) extract against two types of herpes simplex viruses in cell culture. Die Pharmazie-An International Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 64(8), 538–41.Rayne, S., & Mazza, G. (2007). Biological activities of extracts from sumac (Rhus spp.): a review. Nature Precedings, 1-1. and high concentrations of R. ovata extract have been proven to have antibacterial properties that impede the growth of gram-positive bacteria like , but not gram-negative bacteria like or fungi.Adams, S. T. (2018). Investigation of Antimicrobial Properties of Rhus ovata Extracts.

The Kumeyaay have diverse uses for the plant, including for food, , and as or construction material. They eat the fruits, preparing them in a number of ways. They may be cooked or toasted when ripe, and ground into a meal like . Alternatively, fruits would be made into a tangy drink, using the sugar that forms on the skin, creating a concoction with a sweet and sour taste, similar to . Medicinal uses of the plant are primarily for treatment of conditions that affect the female reproductive system. The leaves and stems, once cut, are made into a tea, which works as an anesthetic for women going through labor. The same treatment may also be applied to animals going through or birth, except with the infusion being made from the leaves.Wilken, Michael A. (2012) An Ethnobotany of Baja California's Kumeyaay Indians. Retrieved 13 October 2021

The seeds are reportedly not edible.

(1985). 9780394731278, Knopf. .
(1994). 9780394507613, Knopf.


Cultivation
Rhus ovata prefers well-drained soil in a sunny location, with little water once established, being a very drought-tolerant plant. It does not respond to formal boxed pruning well; however, as needed for wildfire fuel reduction or rejuvenation, occasional autumnal cutting, down to above the base crown, is done for new basal sprouting. The plant is good at controlling erosion.


Seed
Extracting seed from the fruit involves cleaning the flesh off by placing fruits in a macerator, blender, or by soaking the fruits until the walls are soft enough to be removed. Because the fruits have a hard endocarp, seeds must be scarified to germinate, as they are adapted to natural scarification from wildfire.Stone, E. C., & Juhren, G. (1951). The effect of fire on the germination of the seed of Rhus ovata Wats. American Journal of Botany, 368–72. Scarification can be achieved through heat treatment by boiling water or in the oven at a temperature of 100 °C for 5 minutes, or by soaking the seeds in sulfuric acid for 3 to 5 minutes. Without pretreatment, less than 5% of fresh seeds will germinate. The related lemonade sumac's seeds will germinate simply by sanding the edges of the drupe and hydrating the seed in water for a day.


See also
  • California chaparral and woodlands – ( ecoregion)
  • California coastal sage and chaparral – subecoregion
  • Coastal sage scrub – ( plant association)
  • California montane chaparral and woodlands – subecoregion


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