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The entrance lane at the old raised beach has an unusual planting in the hedgerow of several common whitebeam x wild service tree hybrids.
A small woodland is made up of Beech, Yew and Common Whitebeam.
The species reproduces apomictically and was presumably created by autopolyploidysation of the common Whitebeam proper (Sorbus aria s.str.)
The quarry supports some trees and scrub such as Common Whitebeam, Ash, Hawthorn and Hazel.
The only known species is the Shipova, xSorbopyrus auricularis, a hybrid between European pear (Pyrus communis) and Common Whitebeam (Sorbus aria).
Aria nivea), the Whitebeam or Common Whitebeam is a deciduous tree, compact and domed, with few upswept branches; it generally favours dry limestone and chalk soils.
The tree canopy includes Beech (some huge old coppice stools), Ash, Sessile Oak, Silver Birch, Common Whitebeam and Small-leaved Lime.
Houston's Whitebeam, or Sorbus x houstoniae, is a hybrid of two deciduous trees, the Common Whitebeam (Sorbus aria) and the Bristol Whitebeam (Sorbus bristoliensis).
The trees developed in a highly complex fashion, which involved the Common whitebeam (Sorbus aria) giving rise to the more robust Rock Whitebeam (Sorbus rupicola) which is still found on Holy Isle.
The Cheddar whitebeam, which has evolved as a cross between the common whitebeam and the grey-leaved whitebeam, is unique to the gorge, but its survival is threatened by the goats that were introduced specifically to keep down the growth of new trees and encourage the proliferation of rare plant species such as the Cheddar pink.
The larvae feed on Sorbus aria and possibly also cultivated Cotoneaster species.
Larvae were recorded feeding on Sorbus aria and Pyrus scandinavica.
Sorbus rupicola is a member of Sorbus aria agg., which contains 20 subspecies.
He might have meant the fruits of Ariocarpus plants look like the fruits of the Sorbus aria.
Sorbus aria (syn.
Its name refers to a similarity of its leaves to the genus Aria (Sorbus aria).
The species reproduces apomictically and was presumably created by autopolyploidysation of the common Whitebeam proper (Sorbus aria s.str.)
Another possibility for the origin of the name is the work Scheidweiler did on the tree Sorbus aria at the time he described the genus Ariocarpus.
One-way introgressive hybridisation between Sorbus aria and S. torminalis (Rosaceae) in southern Britain.
All are tetraploid apomictic species which breed true without pollination, and ultimately of hybrid origin between Sorbus aria and Sorbus aucuparia.
The discontinuous canopy favours a diverse understory, dominated by holly Ilex aquifolium, whitebeam Sorbus aria and rowan S. aucuparia with birches.
The only known species is the Shipova, xSorbopyrus auricularis, a hybrid between European pear (Pyrus communis) and Common Whitebeam (Sorbus aria).
The larvae feed on Amelanchier ovalis, Cotoneaster integerrimus, Cotoneaster nebrodensis, Sorbus aria and Sorbus chamaemespilus.
The larvae feed on Amelachier parviflora, Cotoneaster racemiflorus, Cotoneaster salicifolia, Sorbus aria and Sorbus torminalis.
The tree is of hybrid origin, between Sorbus torminalis (wild service tree) and a member of the Sorbus aria (whitebeam) group, but it exhibits apomixis and breeds true from seed.
Houston's Whitebeam, or Sorbus x houstoniae, is a hybrid of two deciduous trees, the Common Whitebeam (Sorbus aria) and the Bristol Whitebeam (Sorbus bristoliensis).
The trees developed in a highly complex fashion, which involved the Common whitebeam (Sorbus aria) giving rise to the more robust Rock Whitebeam (Sorbus rupicola) which is still found on Holy Isle.
The larvae feed on Amelanchier ovalis, Cotoneaster, Crataegus laevigata, Crataegus monogyna, Malus sylvestris, Prunus avium, Prunus spinosa, Sorbus aria and Sorbus aucuparia.
It has sometimes been placed in a separate genus of its own as Micromeles alnifolia, differing from other whitebeams in the deciduous sepals on the fruit (persistent in other whitebeams), but genetic evidence places it close to Sorbus aria.
The larvae feed on Amelanchier ovalis, Cotoneaster integerrimus, Crataegus, Cydonia oblonga, Malus domestica, Mespilus germanica, Prunus cerasus, Pyrus communis, Sorbus aria, Sorbus aucuparia, Sorbus intermedia and Sorbus torminalis.
The larva feed on various shrubs and trees, including Crataegus, Prunus spinosa, Cotoneaster horizontalis, Juniperus communis, Malus domestica, Malus sylvestris, Prunus domestica, Amlanchier, Pyrus communis, Sorbus aria and Sorbus aucuparia.