Cotoneaster tenuipes
Cotoneaster tenuipes is an "extremely graceful," meter-high, hirsute, deciduous cotoneaster shrub endemic to the temperate regions of China. It was named and described by botanists Alfred Rehder and E.H.Wilson in 1912.
Description
Branches
The terminal and secondary twigs of C. tenuipes are slender, cylindrical and tapering; initially grayish-yellow, later changing to brownish-red. They have shaggy hairs that lie flatly to the stem surface when new, which are lost by degrees over time.Leaves
The leaves of C. tenuipes are typically 2-2.5 cm long, and 1.5–2 cm wide, and range in shape from ovate or elliptic-ovate to narrowly elliptic-ovate. The undersides are grayish with raised veins, and covered with short, woolly hairs which lie flatly to the surface; the uppersidesare green, with slightly impressed veins, and sparsely covered with long, thin, soft, weak, hairs when young, but nearly hairless with age.
Both the leaf-stems and their stipules are hairy, but the stipules are much less so.
Flowers
Cotoneaster tenuipes goes into bloom from May to June.Its flowers are about 7 mm in diameter, and borne on corymbs of two to four flowers each. The slender pedicels, rachis and hypanthium are villous and closely appressed, but hypanthium only abaxially. The bracts are puberulous, linear or linear-lanceolate. The sepals are triangularly ovate, and the petals are white and stiff, ovate or suborbicular, and are clawed at their base, giving it its epithet tenuipes which equates roughly with "slender foot" or "slender claw". Each flower has 15 stamens, which are shorter than its petals, and 2 styles that are shorter than or equal to the stamens. The ovary is covered at the apex with very short, fine, erect hairs.