Arctostaphylos refugioensis
Arctostaphylos refugioensis is a species of manzanita, known by the common name Refugio manzanita. It is endemic to Santa Barbara County, California, where it can be found along the immediate coastline, including the vicinity of Refugio State Beach, and into the Santa Ynez Mountains of the northwestern Transverse Ranges.[1]
Arctostaphylos refugioensis | |
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Species: | A. refugioensis |
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Arctostaphylos refugioensis Gankin | |
Description
Arctostaphylos refugioensis is a plant of the coastal sage and chaparral on sandstone soils. This is a shrub reaching at least 2 metres (6.6 ft) tall and known to exceed 4 metres (13 ft) in maximum height.
Its branches are covered in long, gland-tipped bristles and a dense foliage of oblong greenish to deep red leaves. Each leaf is dull, waxy, and often bristly in texture, smooth or toothed along the edges, and up to 4.5 centimeters long.
The shrub flowers in winter in inflorescences of cone-shaped manzanita flowers each up to a centimeter long. The fruit is a spherical to oval red drupe with a pointed end, measuring at least a centimeter long.
See also
- California chaparral and woodlands — ecoregion.
- California coastal sage and chaparral — subregion.
- California montane chaparral and woodlands — subregion.
References
- Calflora database: Arctostaphylos refugioensis (Refugio manzanita) . accessed 2.2.2013
External links
- Jepson Manual Treatment — Arctostaphylos refugioensis
- USDA Plants Profile for Arctostaphylos refugioensis
- Arctostaphylos refugioensis — U.C. CalPhoto gallery
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arctostaphylos refugioensis. |