True cherries '', sweet cherry '', sour cherry . The variety
Picota is famous for its quality
Prunus subg.
Cerasus contains species that are typically called cherries. They are known as true cherries and distinguished by having a single winter
bud per axil, by having the
flowers in small
corymbs or
umbels of several together (occasionally solitary, e.g.
P. serrula; some species with short
racemes, e.g.
P. maacki), and by having smooth fruit with no obvious groove. Examples of true cherries are: •
Prunus apetala (Siebold & Zucc.) Franch. & Sav. – clove cherry •
Prunus avium (L.) L. – sweet cherry, wild cherry, mazzard or gean •
Prunus campanulata Maxim. – Taiwan cherry, Formosan cherry or bell-flowered cherry •
Prunus canescens Bois. – grey-leaf cherry •
Prunus cerasus L. – sour cherry •
Prunus emarginata (Douglas ex Hook.) Walp. – Oregon cherry or bitter cherry •
Prunus fruticosa Pall. – European dwarf cherry, dwarf cherry, Mongolian cherry or steppe cherry •
Prunus incisa Thunb. – Fuji cherry •
Prunus jamasakura Siebold ex Koidz. – Japanese mountain cherry or Japanese hill cherry •
Prunus leveilleana (Koidz.) Koehne – Korean mountain cherry •
Prunus maackii Rupr. – Manchurian cherry or Amur chokecherry •
Prunus mahaleb L. – Saint Lucie cherry, rock cherry, perfumed cherry or mahaleb cherry •
Prunus maximowiczii Rupr. – Miyama cherry or Korean cherry •
Prunus nipponica Matsum. – Takane cherry, peak cherry or Japanese alpine cherry •
Prunus pensylvanica L.f. – pin cherry, fire cherry, or wild red cherry •
Prunus pseudocerasus Lindl. – Chinese sour cherry or Chinese cherry •
Prunus rufa Wall ex Hook.f. – Himalayan cherry •
Prunus rufoides C.K.Schneid. – tailed-leaf cherry •
Prunus sargentii Rehder – northern Japanese hill cherry, northern Japanese mountain cherry or Sargent's cherry •
Prunus serrula Franch. – paperbark cherry, birch bark cherry or Tibetan cherry •
Prunus serrulata Lindl. – Japanese cherry, hill cherry, Oriental cherry or East Asian cherry •
Prunus speciosa (Koidz.) Ingram – Oshima cherry •
Prunus takesimensis Nakai – Ulleungdo cherry •
Prunus yedoensis Matsum. – Yoshino cherry or Tokyo cherry
Bush cherries '', Nanking cherry (a bush cherry species) Bush cherries are characterized by having three winter buds per axil. They used to be included in
Prunus subg.
Cerasus, but phylogenetic research indicates they should be a section of
Prunus subg. Prunus. Examples of bush cherries are: •
Prunus cistena Koehne – purple-leaf sand cherry •
Prunus humilis Bunge – Chinese plum-cherry or humble bush cherry •
Prunus japonica Thunb. – Korean cherry •
Prunus prostrata Labill. – mountain cherry, rock cherry, spreading cherry or prostrate cherry •
Prunus pumila L. – sand cherry •
Prunus tomentosa Thunb. – Nanking cherry, Manchu cherry, downy cherry, Shanghai cherry, Ando cherry, mountain cherry, Chinese dwarf cherry, Chinese bush cherry
Bird cherries, cherry laurels, and other racemose cherries '', hollyleaf cherry (a cherry laurel species) '', black cherry (a bird cherry species)
Prunus subg. Padus contains most racemose species that are called cherries which used to be included in the genera
Padus (bird cherries),
Laurocerasus (cherry laurels),
Pygeum (tropical species such as African cherry) and
Maddenia. Examples of the racemose cherries are: •
Prunus africana (Hook.f.) Kalkman – African cherry •
Prunus caroliniana Aiton – Carolina laurel cherry or laurel cherry •
Prunus cornuta (Wall. ex Royle) Steud. – Himalayan bird cherry •
Prunus grayana Maxim. – Japanese bird cherry or Gray's bird cherry •
Prunus ilicifolia (Nutt. ex Hook. & Arn.) Walp. – hollyleaf cherry, evergreen cherry, holly-leaved cherry or islay •
Prunus laurocerasus L. – cherry laurel •
Prunus lyonii (Eastw.) Sarg. – Catalina Island cherry •
Prunus myrtifolia (L.) Urb. – West Indian cherry •
Prunus napaulensis (Ser.) Steud. – Nepal bird cherry •
Prunus occidentalis Sw. – western cherry laurel •
Prunus padus L. – bird cherry or European bird cherry •
Prunus pleuradenia Griseb. – Antilles cherry •
Prunus serotina Ehrh. – black cherry, wild cherry •
Prunus ssiori F.Schmidt – Hokkaido bird cherry •
Prunus virginiana L. – chokecherry == Etymology ==