Arctostaphylos glandulosa Eastw.
Family: Ericaceae
Eastwood's Manzanita
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
William R. Hewlett  

Shrubs, erect or mound-forming, 1-3 m; burl present; twigs tomentose to short-hairy, with eglandular hairs or with long, clear, pink or dark, glandular hairs. Leaves: petiole 5-10 mm; blade bright green, slightly glaucous to strongly gray-glaucous, shiny or dull, elliptic to ovate, 2-4.5 × 1-2.5 cm, base cuneate to rounded, sometimes ± lobed or truncate, margins entire or toothed, plane, surfaces papillate, scabrous or smooth, glabrous or glandular-puberulent to -hairy, puberulent, or finely tomentose, sometimes glabrescent; (abaxial surface sometimes with more stomata than adaxial surface). Inflorescences panicles, 3-6-branched; immature inflorescence pendent, (branches crowded, not concealed by bracts), axis 1-3 cm, 1+ mm diam., short-hairy to hairy, with or without glandular hairs; bracts not appressed, variable, from scalelike and awl-like to leaflike and deltate, lanceolate, or broadly lanceolate (at least at base), 3-10 mm, apex acute, surfaces hairy or finely glandular-hairy. Pedicels 3-10 mm, sparsely hairy to finely glandular-hairy. Flowers: corolla white to pink, conic to urceolate; ovary densely white-hairy, sometimes glandular. Fruits slightly (or markedly) depressed-globose, 6-10 mm diam., glabrous or finely glandular-hairy, (viscid). Stones usually mostly distinct, sometimes connate.

Arctostaphylos glandulosa occurs in the California Floristic Province from southern Oregon to northern Baja California within the Coast, Transverse, and Peninsular ranges.

Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
William R. Hewlett  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Beatrice F. Howitt  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Charles Webber  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Beatrice F. Howitt  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Charles Webber  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Charles Webber  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Jorg and Mimi Fleige  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Dean Wm. Taylor  
Arctostaphylos glandulosa image
Jorg and Mimi Fleige