| Leaves:
Alternate; once pinnately compound; deciduous; 3 leaflets; dark green;
strong odor when crushed; shiny.
Twigs/buds: Twigs slender; round; dark brown; shiny. No terminal
bud; lateral buds small, hairy.
Flowers/fruit: Flowers polygamo-monoecious, greenish-white, small,
fragrant; held in dense clusters; appear in mid-May to early June.
Fruit a two-seeded samara that resembles hops or an elm samara;
round; 1/2" to 1" diameter; held in drooping clusters
that persist after leaves fall; bitter tasting.
Bark: Dark gray to gray-brown; fairly smooth to warty.
Wood: Heavy; hard; ring-porous; not important.
General: Native from western Texas, west to California, and northern
Mexico, including southern Utah. Thought by some to be a variant
of an eastern U.S. species, Ptelea trifoliata var. angustifolia.
Typically found on rocky slopes at the edge of wooded areas. Intermediate
shade tolerance.
Landscape Use: Seldom if ever planted in cultivated landscapes.
Small and generally shrubby. Likely fairly drought tolerant and
able to withstand harsh soils conditions. Zones 3-9.
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