Crataegus anamesa, the Fort Bend hawthorn, is a species of hawthorn that is endemic to Fort Bend County, Texas, in North America.[1][2] When mature, it stands 12-15' in height and produces dark red fruit 1/3-2/5" in diameter.[2]
crataegus, anamesa, fort, bend, hawthorn, species, hawthorn, that, endemic, fort, bend, county, texas, north, america, when, mature, stands, height, produces, dark, fruit, diameter, scientific, classification, kingdom, plantae, clade, tracheophytes, clade, ang. Crataegus anamesa the Fort Bend hawthorn is a species of hawthorn that is endemic to Fort Bend County Texas in North America 1 2 When mature it stands 12 15 in height and produces dark red fruit 1 3 2 5 in diameter 2 Crataegus anamesa Scientific classification Kingdom Plantae Clade Tracheophytes Clade Angiosperms Clade Eudicots Clade Rosids Order Rosales Family Rosaceae Genus Crataegus Section Crataegus sect Coccineae Series Crataegus ser Virides Species C anamesa Binomial name Crataegus anamesaSarg Range of Crataegus anamesaReferences edit USDA Plants Profile Crataegus anamesa accessed 12 2 2010 a b Vines R A 2014 Trees of East Texas University of Texas Press nbsp This Crataegus article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crataegus anamesa amp oldid 1207913974, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,