Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Arctostaphylos glauca

Arctostaphylos glauca Lindl.  
Family: Ericaceae
Big-Berry Manzanita
[Arctostaphylos glauca f. adenopuberula P. V. Wells, moreArctostaphylos glauca f. puberula (J. T. Howell) P. V. Wells, Arctostaphylos glauca var. puberula J.T.Howell]
Arctostaphylos glauca image
  • FNA
  • Resources
V. Thomas Parker, Michael C. Vasey, Jon E. Keeley in Flora of North America (vol. 8)
Shrubs or trees, erect, mound-forming, 1-8 m; burl absent; twigs usually glabrous, some-times short-hairy or glandular-hairy. Leaves: petiole 7-15 mm; blade white-glaucous, dull, oblong-ovate to ± orbiculate, 2.5-5 × 2-4 cm, base rounded, truncate, or slightly lobed, margins entire, plane, surfaces smooth, glabrous. Inflorescences panicles, 4-8-branched; immature inflorescence pendent, branches spreading, axis 2-3 cm, 1+ mm diam., usually glabrous, sometimes short-hairy or glandular-hairy; bracts not appressed, (spreading), scalelike, deltate, 3-6 mm, (fleshy), apex mucronate, surfaces glabrous; (buds exposed). Pedicels 8-10 mm, finely glandular-hairy. Flowers: corolla white, conic to urceolate; ovary densely glandular-viscid. Fruits globose, 12-15 mm diam., glabrous, (viscid). Stones connate into single sphere. 2n = 26.

Flowering winter-early spring. Rocky slopes, chaparral, woodlands; 300-2200 m; Calif.; Mexico (Baja California).

Arctostaphylos glauca is widespread, occurring from Mount Diablo in central California through the southern Coast Ranges, east through the Transverse Ranges into the desert, and south in the Peninsular Ranges into northern Baja California, usually in drier interior ranges. It is distinctive throughout its range; however, some populations have nonglandular twig puberulence and others are stipitate-glandular, often mixed in with individuals that are typically glabrous. Arctostaphylos glauca can be a component of chaparral and can also be found in woodlands and at the edges of grasslands.

Arctostaphylos glauca
Open Interactive Map
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Arctostaphylos glauca image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.