four-wing saltbush Chenopodiaceae Atriplex canescens (Pursh) Nutt. Listen to the Latin   symbol: ATCA2
Other Fact Sheets
Leaf: Evergreen, alternate, linear to narrowly oblong, entire, 1/2 to 2 inches long, gray-green and scruffy, often very sparse.
Flower: Dioecious; males and females a drab yellow-brown, both occur in axillary and terminal panicles, appear in summer.

Fruit: A light green, ripening to light brown utricle in tight spike-like clusters, with papery bracts forming 4 wings, ripen in fall and persist for up to 2 years.

Twig: Slender, light gray-green, new twigs with fine gray hairs.

Bark: Light gray-brown, older stems can become very irregularly furrowed.

Form: A small to large multi-stemmed and heavily branched shrub. A large amount of variation exists across the population. On poor sites reaches 3 to 5 feet in height, on better sites it may reach up to 15 feet with and even greater crown spread. Large amounts of dead wood often accumulate beneath and within the crowns.
 
No range map exists for this species. See a map of the states in which Atriplex canescens can be found (opens a new window). USDAFS Additional Silvics - USDA Plants Database
Atriplex canescens is native to North America.

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