Peach (Prunus persica) flowers and fruit. Bottom right: a peach flower face-on in late April. Note the five pink petals with narrowed bases and numerous stamens with orange anthers. Top right: lateral view of a peach flower. Note the burgundy-colored calyx formed by the fusion of the bases of the five sepals. Top left: three-quarters close-up of the center of a peach flower. The green style with an orange stigma (black arrow) is often difficult to see among the numerous stamens. Bottom left: two immature peach fruits in late June. Note the characteristic peach color and fuzzy surface.
Peach flowers arise along young branches, blooming beginning before the leaves have opened in the spring; the flowers are usually solitary but occasionally occur in pairs. Individual flowers are 1-1.5″ long consisting of a burgundy-colored calyx with five rounded apical lobes (sepals); five spreading pink (rarely, white) petals, oval with abruptly narrowed bases (“clawed”); 15-30 stamens with pink filaments and yellow to orange anthers; and a pistil with a single light green style nearly as long as the stamens. Fertilized flowers are replaced by green, fuzzy ovoids, eventually up to 3″ long and across and containing a single seed; peach-colored when mature.
Peach (Prunus persica) stems and leaves. Left: several peach branches and a trunk covered with typical elongate leaves folded around the leaf midline. Right: a single peach leaf showing the upper surface of the leaf (top image) and the underside of the same leaf (lower image).
Peach is an exotic tree from Asia, introduced first to Europe, then to North America (in the 16th century by Spanish colonizers). Peach trees were grown in Virginia by 1629. Feral peach trees (from discarded pits) are widespread, although the tree is short lived (15-25 years) so wild populations are rarely established. A peach tree is relatively small (10-30 feet tall) with a 6-8″ diameter trunk and a broad crown. The trunk bark is gray with horizontal lenticels, growing rougher with age; larger branches are similar. New shoots put out from the tips of the branches are light green and usually hairless. The leaves are alternate, restricted to the new shoots and branches, 2-6″ long and 1/2-1.5″ across, a combination of lance-shaped and elliptical with serrated margins, drooping down from their petioles and often folded longitudinally around the midvein.
The same peach tree (Prunus persica) on Wooded Island in bloom in late April (left) and showing significant growth, a profusion of leaves, and immature fruits (arrows) in late June of the same year.
Peach is an exotic tree from Asia, introduced first to Europe, then to North America (in the 16th century by Spanish colonizers). Peach trees were grown in Virginia by 1629. Feral peach trees (from discarded pits) are widespread, although the tree is short lived (15-25 years) so wild populations are rarely established. A peach tree is relatively small (10-30 feet tall) with a 6-8″ diameter trunk and a broad crown. The trunk bark is gray with horizontal lenticels, growing rougher with age; larger branches are similar. New shoots put out from the tips of the branches are light green and usually hairless. The leaves are alternate, restricted to the new shoots and branches, 2-6″ long and 1/2-1.5″ across, a combination of lance-shaped and elliptical with serrated margins, drooping down from their petioles and often folded longitudinally around the midvein. Flowers arise along young branches, blooming beginning before the leaves have opened in the spring; the flowers are usually solitary but occasionally occur in pairs. Individual flowers are 1-1.5″ long consisting of a burgundy-colored calyx with five rounded apical lobes (sepals); five spreading pink (rarely, white) petals, oval with abruptly narrowed bases (“clawed”); 15-30 stamens with pink filaments and yellow to orange anthers; and a pistil with a single light green style nearly as long as the stamens. Fertilized flowers are replaced by green, fuzzy ovoids, eventually up to 3″ long and across and containing a single seed; peach-colored when mature.

