Prunus salicina (syn. Prunus triflora or Prunus thibetica; also called Japanese plum) is a small deciduous tree native to China, and now also grown in Korea and Japan. It grows up to 10 m tall, and has reddish-brown shoots. The leaves are 6-12 cm long and 2.5-5 cm broad, with a serrated margin. The flowers are produced in early spring, 2 cm diameter with five white petals. The fruit is a drupe 4-7 cm diameter with yellow-pink flesh; it can be harvested in the summer. When fully ripe it can be eaten raw.
Prunus salicina should not be confused with the Ume, the Japanese name for Prunus mume, a related species of plum also grown in Japan, Korea, and China. Another tree, Prunus japonica, is also a separate species despite having a Latin name similar to Prunus salicina's common name.
Prunus salicina is known in Chinese as 日本李 (pinyin: rìběn lǐ, lit. "Japanese plum"), 李 (pinyin: lǐ), or 李子 (pinyin: lǐzi). In Japanese it is called sumomo (kanji: 李 or 酸桃, hiragana: すもも, katakana: スモモ; lit. "sour peach" or "sour fruit"), and in Korean it is called jadu (자두).
The surname Li (李; pinyin: Lǐ; also sometimes spelled "Lee", lit. "plum tree") is the most common surname in China, and also in the world. The Korean equivalent is Yi (hangul: 이, hanja: 李; also romanized "Lee" or "Rhee", or, less commonly, "Li", "I", or "Yee").
This article includes text based on the corresponding Japanese Wikipedia article.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Prunus salicina".
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