Acer sinense explained

Acer sinense is a species of flowering plant in the maple genus Acer, native to southeast and south-central China.[1] A small (typically 3 to 5m tall) tree rarely reaching 15m, it prefers to grow in forested valleys 500 to 2500m above sea level.[2]

It is a highly morphologically variable species, leading to some taxonomic confusion. Some authorities consider it to be a subspecies of Campbell's maple, Acer campbellii subsp. sinense, but this is incorrect; it is in its own species complex.[3] Good traits to distinguish it from members of the Acer wilsonii species complex are that its inflorescence is a compound corymbose panicle with 60 to 70 flowers, with pedicels that are 5 to 6 mm long, its ovaries are pilose, appearing white, and its nutlet is nearly glabrous, and convex, without any veins.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Acer sinense Pax . . 2017 . Plants of the World Online . Board of Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew . 19 November 2020 .
  2. Web site: 中华枫 zhong hua feng . . Flora of China . efloras.org . 19 November 2020 .
  3. Eom . Hyun Joo . de Jong . Piet C. . Chang . Chin-Sung . December 2011 . A reappraisal of the Acer wilsonii complex and Related Species in China . Korean Journal of Plant Taxonomy . 41 . 4 . 329–337 . 10.11110/kjpt.2011.41.4.329 . 19 November 2020 . key … based on the number of leaf lobes: 3-lobed (A. wilsonii coml[p]ex), 5-lobed (A. sinense complex), and 7-lobed taxa (A. campbellii complex) .