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Malus
Family: Rosaceae
Malus image
Patrick Alexander
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The Morton Arboretum
Small tree or shrub often 4.5 - 7.5 m tall Leaves: with stalks and stipules, toothed or lobed, usually hairy, folded or rolled up longitudinally in bud. Flowers: bisexual, borne in an inflorescence, with fifteen to 50 stamens, usually yellow anthers, two to five styles fused at the base, and an inferior and three- to five-celled ovary. Sepals: five, fused at the base, sometimes persistent. Petals: white to pink or red, nearly circular to inversely egg-shaped. Fruit: fleshy with a core (pome), red to yellow or green. Bark: becoming shiny grayish brown and scaly with age. Buds: usually reddish brown, egg-shaped with overlapping scales, often with hairs sticking out from the inner surface of the scales. Form: low and mound-like to wide-spreading, sometimes columnar to weeping in cultivars, highly branched, rarely somewhat spiny.

Flowering: spring

Habitat and ecology: Woods and thickets. Some Malus species are native, while others are introduced and sometimes escape into natural areas.

Notes: Malus is a challenging genus taxonomically and is sometimes included in the genus Pyrus. Dirr (1998) states a fruit less than 5 cm (2 inches) in diameter is called a crabapple, while a fruit larger than 5 cm is called an apple. See Dirr (1998) for information on the hundreds of Malus cultivars available for landscape use.

Etymology: Malus is the classic name for apple.

Author: The Morton Arboretum

Species within checklist: Missouri
Malus angustifolia
Image of Malus angustifolia
Malus baccata
Image of Malus baccata
Malus bracteata
Image of Malus bracteata
Malus communis
Image of Malus communis
Malus coronaria
Image of Malus coronaria
Malus domestica
Image of Malus domestica
Malus glabrata
Image of Malus glabrata
Malus glaucescens
Image of Malus glaucescens
Malus ioënsis
Image of Malus ioënsis
Malus lancifolia
Image of Malus lancifolia
Malus praecox
Image of Malus praecox
Malus pumila
Image of Malus pumila
Malus sylvestris
Image of Malus sylvestris
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