- You are here:
- Full Key
- Woody plants
- Broad-leaved woody plants
- Amelanchier nantucketensis
Amelanchier nantucketensis — Nantucket serviceberry, Nantucket shadbush
Copyright: various copyright holders. To reuse an image, please click it to see who you will need to contact.
Facts
Nantucket shadbush is a globally rare species found only in the Northeast Atlantic coastal areas from Virginia to Nova Scotia. Once thought to be confined only to seaside locations, new populations have been recently identified on dry, open hilltops in interior Massachusetts. This leafy, much-branched shrub can be distinguised from related species in similar habitats by its small (5-7mm), spoon-shaped flower petals that sometimes bear pollen directly on their margins (an uncommon phenomenon known as andropetaly).
Habitat
Anthropogenic (man-made or disturbed habitats), meadows and fields, ridges or ledges, shores of rivers or lakes, sandplains and barrens
New England distribution
Adapted from BONAP data
Native: indigenous.
Non-native: introduced (intentionally or unintentionally); has become naturalized.
County documented: documented to exist in the county by evidence (herbarium specimen, photograph). Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
State documented: documented to exist in the state, but not documented to a county within the state. Also covers those considered historical (not seen in 20 years).
Note: when native and non-native populations both exist in a county, only native status is shown on the map.
Found this plant? Take a photo and post a sighting.
Characteristics
- Habitat
- terrestrial
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Rhode Island
- Growth form
- the plant is a shrub (a woody plant with several stems growing from the base)
- Leaf type
- the leaf blade is simple (lobed or unlobed but not separated into leaflets)
- Leaves per node
- there is one leaf per node along the stem
- Leaf blade edges
- the edge of the leaf blade has teeth
- Leaf duration
- the leaves drop off in winter (or they wither but persist on the plant)
- armature on plant
- the plant does not have spines, prickles, or thorns
- Leaf blade length
- 20–30 mm
- Leaf blade width
- 15–20 mm
- Leaf stalk
- the leaves have leaf stalks
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is fleshy
- Bark texture
- the bark of an adult plant is thin and smooth
- Twig winter color
- gray
- Bud scale number
- there are three or more scales on the winter bud, and they overlap like shingles, with one edge covered and the other edge exposed
-
Buds or leaf scars
- Bud scale number
- there are three or more scales on the winter bud, and they overlap like shingles, with one edge covered and the other edge exposed
- Bud scar shape (Fraxinus)
- NA
- Collateral buds
- there are no collateral buds on the sides of the branches
- Superposed buds
- there are no superposed buds on the branch
- Winter bud scales
- the winter bud is perulate (partially or completely covered with one or more scales)
-
Flowers
- Carpels fused
- the carpels are fused to one another
- Enlarged sterile flowers
- there are no enlarged sterile flowers on the plant
- Flower petal color
- white
- Flower symmetry
- there are two or more ways to evenly divide the flower (the flower is radially symmetrical)
- Hairs on ovary (Amelanchier)
-
- the top of the ovary has hairs on it
- the top of the ovary has no hairs
- Hypanthium present
- the flower has a hypanthium
- Inflorescence type
- the inflorescence is a raceme (a long unbranched stem with stalked flowers growing along it)
- Number of pistils
- 1
- Ovary position
-
- the ovary is above the point of petal and/or sepal attachment
- the ovary is below the point of petal and/or sepal attachment
- Petal and sepal arrangement
- the flower includes two cycles of petal- or sepal-like structures
- Petal appearance
- the petals are thin and delicate, and pigmented (colored other than green or brown)
- Petal fusion
- the perianth parts are separate
- Sepal cilia (Ilex)
- NA
- Sepals fused only to sepals
- the sepals are separate from one another
- Stamen number
-
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13 or more
- Stamen position relative to petals
- NA
- Stamens fused
- the stamens are not fused to one another
-
Fruits or seeds
- Berry color
- red
- Fruit tissue origin
- the hypanthium of the flower becomes part of the fruit
- Fruit type (general)
- the fruit is fleshy
- Fruit type (specific)
- the fruit is a berry (fleshy, with the wall enclosing one or more sections, with two or more seeds)
- Nut with spines (Fagaceae)
- NA
- Wings on fruit
- there are no wings on the fruit
-
Glands or sap
- Sap color
- the sap is clear and watery
- Stalked glands on fruit (Rosa)
- NA
-
Growth form
- Growth form
- the plant is a shrub (a woody plant with several stems growing from the base)
-
Leaves
- Hairs on upper side of leaf blade
- the upper side of the leaf is not hairy, or has very few hairs
- Leaf blade base shape
-
- The base of the leaf blade is cordate (heart-shaped, with rounded lobes)
- the base of the leaf blade is rounded
- Leaf blade edges
- the edge of the leaf blade has teeth
- Leaf blade edges (Acer)
- NA
- Leaf blade flatness
- the leaf is flat (planar) at the edges
- Leaf blade hairs
- NA
- Leaf blade length
- 20–30 mm
- Leaf blade scales
- there are no scales on the leaf blades
- Leaf blade shape
-
- the leaf blade is oblong (rectangular but with rounded ends)
- the leaf blade is obovate (egg-shaped, but with the widest point above the middle of the leaf blade)
- the leaf blade is ovate (widest below the middle and broadly tapering at both ends)
- Leaf blade texture
- the leaf blade is herbaceous (has a leafy texture)
- Leaf blade translucent dots
- there are no translucent dots on the leaf blade
- Leaf blade width
- 15–20 mm
- Leaf duration
- the leaves drop off in winter (or they wither but persist on the plant)
- Leaf lobe tips (Quercus)
- NA
- Leaf midrib glands
- the midrib of the leaf blade lacks glands on the upper surface
- Leaf stalk
- the leaves have leaf stalks
- Leaf stalk nectaries
- there are no nectaries on the leaf stalk
- Leaf teeth
- the leaf blade margin is serrate (with forward-pointing) or dentate (with outward-pointing) with medium-sized to coarse teeth
- Leaf teeth hairs (Carya)
- NA
- Leaf type
- the leaf blade is simple (lobed or unlobed but not separated into leaflets)
- Leaves per node
- there is one leaf per node along the stem
- Specific leaf type
- the leaves are simple (lobed or unlobed but not separated into leaflets
- Stipules
- the plant has stipules
-
Place
- Habitat
- terrestrial
- New England state
-
- Connecticut
- Maine
- Massachusetts
- New Hampshire
- Rhode Island
- Specific habitat
-
- man-made or disturbed habitats
- meadows or fields
- ridges or ledges
- sandplains or barrens
- shores of rivers or lakes
-
Scent
- Plant odor
- the plant does not have much of an odor, or it has an unpleasant or repellant odor
-
Stem, shoot, branch
- Aerial roots
- the plant has no aerial roots
- Bark texture
- the bark of an adult plant is thin and smooth
- Branch brittleness (willows only)
- NA
- Branch cross-section
- the branch is circular in cross-section, or it has five or more sides, so that there are no sharp angles
- First-year cane (Rubus)
- NA
- Pith shape
- the outline of the pith in a twig is roughly round
- Twig papillae (Vaccinium species only)
- NA
- Twig winter color
- gray
- Wings on branch
- the branch does not have wings on it
- armature on plant
- the plant does not have spines, prickles, or thorns
Wetland status
Usually occurs in non-wetlands, but occasionally in wetlands. (Wetland indicator code: FACU)
In New England
Distribution
- Connecticut
- present
- Maine
- present
- Massachusetts
- present
- New Hampshire
- present
- Rhode Island
- present
- Vermont
- absent
Conservation status
Exact status definitions can vary from state to state. For details, please check with your state.
- Connecticut
- unrankable (S-rank: SU)
- Maine
- rare (S-rank: S2), threatened (code: T)
- Massachusetts
- uncommon (S-rank: S3), #NAME? (code: #NAME?)
- Rhode Island
- extremely rare (S-rank: S1), state endangered (code: SE)
From Flora Novae Angliae dichotomous key
8. Amelanchier nantucketensis Bickn. N
Nantucket shadbush. Amelanchier micropetala (B.L. Robins.) Ashe; A. oblongifolia (Torr. & Gray) M. Roam. var. micropetala B.L. Robins.; A. stolonifera Wieg. forma micropetala (B.L. Robins.) Rehd. • CT, MA, ME, NH, ri. Fields, roadsides, sand plains, ledges, river shore outcrops, ridges. Two forms of this species are found in New England—one with a glabrous ovary summit ( nantucketensis s.s.) that is found on the coastal islands of MA (rarely elsewhere) and another with a pubescent ovary summit ( micropetala) that is found on the mainland of MA and in ME and NH. This species is very difficult to distinguish from Amelanchier spicata in the absence of flowers. Some forms of A. nantucketensis are readily distinguished from A. spicata—those that grow taller than 2 m and those that produce arrow-straight shoots ( A. spicata never exceeds 2 m in the wild and never produces arrow-straight shoots). Unfortunately, these forms of A. nantucketensis are rare. Amelanchier nantucketensis commonly has leaf blades that are subentire in the basal third, whereas A. spicata has leaf blades that are commonly toothed to the base. Unfortunately, variation in these species makes applying this characters difficult.
Native to North America?
Yes
Sometimes confused with
Synonyms
- Amelanchier micropetala (B.L. Robins.) Ashe
- Amelanchier oblongifolia (Torr. & Gray) M. Roam. var. micropetala B.L. Robins.
- Amelanchier stolonifera Wieg. forma micropetala (B.L. Robins.) Rehd.