PLUM, in Botany

common name for a tree of any of many species of the genus Prunus of the family Rosaceae (rose family) and for its fruit, a drupe. The plum is generally cultivated in the temperate zones, though among the numerous varieties and hybrids are types suitable for many soils and sites. Of the plum's more than 100 species 30 are native to North America. It has been cultivated since prehistoric times, longer perhaps than any other fruit except the apple. Alexander the Great is said to have introduced it into Greece from Syria or Persia, where the damson plum had long been grown. The name damson is now applied to several varieties of Prunus domestica, the common garden plum of European or SW Asian origin, e.g., P. domestica var. insititia and others having small leaves and small, oval fruits usually borne in clusters. The fruits are generally tart and are favored for preserves. The greengages and prune plums are also varieties of P. domestica. Populations of plum trees that grow in the wild usually revert to the damson type. In the United States the wild red plum (P. americana) is found along streams and in thickets from New York to the Rocky Mts. Its small, sweet fruit has a purple bloom. This plum was utilized by Native Americans, who ate it raw, cooked, and dried; when dried it was a staple article of diet. Plum butter is made from it. Another American variety is the beach plum, or shore plum (P. maritima), a low-growing shrub common along the eastern coast, especially on Cape Cod, where the gathering of fruit for jelly and preserves became a commercial project. Most of the cultivated plums in the United States are derived from European and Japanese varieties (e.g., P. salicina, introduced by Burbank into the United States from Japan in 1870), although some good ones have come from native species and are valuable in that they thrive in the extreme north and south. The myrobalan, or cherry plum (P. cerasifera), is often used as an understock in plum cultivation. The European plum may be an ancient natural hybrid of this and another Middle Eastern species. The typical plum tree is low and wide-spreading and is one of the earliest fruit trees to bloom. In Japan, where there are many famous plum gardens, the feathery blossoms are much used in decoration. The plum is also of ornamental value in the United States, many of the varieties so used having red or purple foliage and double white, pink, or lilac flowers. The plum is closely related to the almond, apricot, cherry, and other species of the genus Prunus; a number of apricot-plum hybrids, such as the plumcot, Pluot, and Aprium, have been developed. Plums are classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class Magnoliopsida, order Rosales, family Rosaceae.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Plum in Botany
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books on: Plum in Botany  - 40 results

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...temptation, then practically the whole field of botany lies open to you. It has only been superficially...with a sudden new hobby in another aspect of botany. Again, Id like to suggest to the morphologists...figure, the crotch and swirl figure, the plum
...black vinous fruit, ripe in autumn. P. serotina . Plum. Prunus. All are cultivated, except the Beach Plum; but No. 2 is also wild; so is No. 3 in the Southwest. 1. COMMON PLUM P. domestica , with all its varieties, probably came...
...germanica L. Medlar Prunus americana Marsh. Wild plum Prunus Amygdalus Batsch. P. communis L. Arcang...L. Sour cherry Prunus domestica L. European plum Prunus hortulana Bailey. Hortulana plum Prunus insititia L. Bullace plum Prunus maritima...
minute globule. The last is the embryo, the future plum or cherry tree. In a mature seed it has greatly enlarged and...occur all those changes which call into being the rose hip or the plum with its stone or the tomato or the blueberry or the blackberry...
...114 , 115 PLOWRIGHT, 270 Plum, 53 , 75 Polarity, a factor...HSIAO, 75 Renascent period in botany, 57 RENNER, O., 182 Resistance...306 Retrogressive period in botAny, 45 Rhizobium leguminosarum...Significant names in the history of Botany, 309 Silk culture, introduction...
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journal articles on: Plum in Botany  - 17 results

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...Smith Barton (Lewiss mentor in botany and a professor of materia medica...of the Osage orange and wild plum to Jefferson, requesting that...Lewiss choleric mentor in botany, Barton, regularly took his...William Woodvilles Medical Botany, and all fourteen volumes of...
...papaya, peach, pear, pecan, pineapple, pistachio, plum, strawberry, and walnut. A chapter devoted to each of those fruits provides taxonomy, history, production values, botany, general culture, harvesting and handling, nutrition...
...63. Barbados cherry(Am) ? 64. Hog plum (Am) ? 65. Mammee apple (Am) ? 66...67. Star apple (Am) ? 68. Sapodilla plum(Am) ? Spices and Flavorings 69. Sugarcane...locally was almost certainly the hog plum (Spondias mombin), now widespread in...
...begins and ends on the shores of Botany Bay. One of the conclusions...bush tomato chutney, Kakadu plum sauce or rosella jam. Foodies...p 19. (2) Alan Frost, Botany Bay Mirages: Illusions of Australias...narrative of the expedition to Botany Bay 1789 in Tim Flannery (ed...
...Mexican Collection. Economic Botany 33:135-62. 1985 Botanical...Greater Southwest. Economic Botany 39:375-86. 1986 Medicinal...Mexican Market Plants. Economic Botany 40:103-24. Chapman, Carl...and Archaeological Context of Plum Bayou Culture in Central Arkansas...
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magazine articles on: Plum in Botany  - 13 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-13 >>  
 
...a street address--Eighty-fifth and Plum because, as they explained, it is about eighty-five miles from Spokane "and plum out in the middle of nowhere." Francis...of 1971 extended our knowledge of local botany 20 million years back. Kienbaum, noting...
...Louisiana, where Frederick developed a botany concentration during his 10 years at the...Washington, DC, where he chaired the botany department and is now professor emeritus...International, where he eventually landed a plum position for someone with his background...
...vocabulary and writes about subjects informed by botany, zoology, geology, astronomy, and physics...from individual actions, such as eating a plum or making love: Night and the swift prescriptions...underbelly exposed for you. Every leaf of every plum in moonlight, all rain prophecies, all...
...era, territory was the most coveted of resources, the plum prize in any power struggle, the mark of distinction between...the lands decreed as virgin provided the Devil Islands, Botany Bays and other similar dumping grounds for European governments...
...needs to change. We need to invest in botany. We cannot afford to neglect the fate...job done. This Indiana Jones-style of botany has become necessary because of the escalating...than 150 plants likely remain. Scrub Plum Location: Florida Claim to Fame: It...unlock the secrets to raising marketable plums under inhospitable conditions. Problem...
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newspaper articles on: Plum in Botany  - 4 results

 
 
...cerasiformus, a local native shrub better known as osoberry or Indian plum. Thats what Tobias Policha told a group of gardeners and naturalists...near Edmonton, Alberta, which stirred an interest in both botany and herbalism. He co-founded the Institute of Contemporary...
...other beekeepers for 20 years before that. With a degree in botany, zoology and genetics from Leicester University, Gloria initially...phacelia, then moving on to orchard blossom (they have hawthorn, plum, cherry, damsons and crab apples) - Honestly, its like Fortnum...
...Wakehurst Place, home to the Millennium Seed Bank. From forensic botany that helps to solve murders and herbal remedy research for curing...slate chippings and standing stones in dark blue, green and plum shades; silver granite boulders, Cornish silver cobbles and...
...Bradshaw, who retired in 1988 after 20 years as a professor of botany at Liverpool University,are among a team of dedicated volunteers...the special guests will be asked to plant a winter-flowering plum tree. In fact,it has always been open to the public,but...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Plum in Botany  - 1 result

 
 
PLUM , in botany common name for a tree of...its fruit, a drupe. The plum is generally cultivated in...many soils and sites. Of the plums more than 100 species 30 are...The greengages and prune plums are also varieties of P. domestica. Populations of plum trees that grow in the wild...Prunus; a number of apricot-plum hybrids, such as the plumcot...Aprium, have been developed. Plums are classified in the division...


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