Pyrus vallis-demonis

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Pyrus vallis-demonis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Rosales
Family: Rosaceae
Genus: Pyrus
Species:
P. vallis-demonis
Binomial name
Pyrus vallis-demonis
Raimondo & Schicchi

Pyrus vallis-demonis, the Pero di Val Demone, is a species of pear in the rose family Rosaceae, native to northeastern Sicily. It is one of five endemic pear species that have been described from the island since 2004, together with P. ciancioi, P. castribonensis, P. sicanorum and P. pedrottiana. It is placed in subgenus Pyrus.

The species was described by University of Palermo botanists Francesco Raimondo [it] and Rosario Schicchi [It] in 2004, as the first of five endemic pear species from the island.[2] The research team around Raimondo is also responsible for the description of the whitebeams Aria madoniensis, A. busambarensis, A. meridionalis and A. phitosiana, as well as that of the wild apple Malus crescimannoi and the four other endemic pears. The species was named in reference to the Val Demone, the name historically applied to the northeastern third of Sicily, where the Nebrodi Mountains, the species' type locality, are located. Although Pyrus vallis-demonis is accepted as a valid species by Plants of the Wold Online (as of February 2025),[3] some[4] have contested its status, preferring to instead treat it as conspecific with the Afghan pear (P. pashia), which is otherwise distributed in southern Asia.

Description and similar species

Leaves

Pyrus vallis-demonis grows as a medium-sized, spiny tree of up to 8 m height, with a conic crown. The leaves are ovate to lanceolate and 2,5-4,5 × 1,3-2,8 cm in size. The white flowers are grouped in corymbs of 12-18 between late April and early June. Morphologically it is very similar to the Plymouth pear (Pyrus cordata) in having hairy leaves of similar size and small fruits. In contrast to that species, however, the twigs of P. vallis-demonis are hairy, and the petioles (leaf stems) and peduncles (flower/fruit stalks) are longer.

Distribution

References

Notes

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