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Trees near Oak Creek outside of Sedona, Arizona [Jeff Bisbee].
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Cupressus glabraCommon NamesSmooth Arizona, smooth, or Arizona cypress (Peattie 1950). Taxonomic NotesSyn.: Cupressus arizonica Greene var. glabra (Sudworth) Little 1966; Cupressus arizonica Greene var. bonita Lemmon 1895 (Farjon 1998). Type: Verde Canyon, Yavapai Co., Arizona. See the "Taxonomic notes" section of Cupressus arizonica for discussion of the relationship between various taxa assigned by some authors to C. arizonica. See the "Taxonomic notes" section of Cupressus for a discussion of the relationship between this and other, closely related Cupressus taxa in northwest Mexico and the adjacent Southwest U.S. Description"A tree, when older, with bark thin and cherry-red, or dark-brown as mahagony, exfoliating in thin plates; foliage like that of the typical variety, only with more prominent glands; seeds 4-5 mm long, bluish pruinose" (Vidakovic 1991). It generally resembles Cup. arizonica, but differs in having smooth reddish bark exfoliating in thin flakes and strips, and in having conspicuously, actively glandular foliage (Farjon 2005). RangeUSA: Arizona: Coconino, Gila, Maricopa and Yavapai counties, at 1200-1680 m elevation in piñon-juniper woodlands, usually on poor desert soils of silicate origin. Common associates include Pinus edulis, P. ponderosa subsp. brachyptera, Juniperus deppeana, J. scopulorum, and J. osteosperma (Farjon 2005). Big TreeHeight 21.3 m, dbh 158 cm, in Tonto National Forest (American Forests 2000). OldestDendrochronologyEthnobotanyObservationsRemarksCitationsSudworth. 1910. A new cypress for Arizona. American Forestry 16: 88-90. http://www.cupressus.net/CUglabraSudworth.html, courtesy of the Cupressus Conservation Project website. See AlsoBisbee, Jeff. 2006. Photos at the Cupressus Conservation Project website. Wolf (1948) and Farjon (2005) each provide a detailed account, with illustrations.
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