Up to Trees and Shrubs Ponderosa Pine Pinyon Pine Utah Juniper Gambel Oak Douglas-fir
Cliffrose Apache Plume Mormon Tea Utah Serviceberry Fernbush Wax Currant Big Sagebrush
Fremont Barberry Rabbit Brush Banana Yucca; Utah Agave Mountain Mahogany Blueberry Elder
Rock Mat Brickellbush Buffalo Berry

Utah Serviceberry

UTAH SERVICEBERRY - Rose Family
Amelanchier utahensis

  This may be the most common shrub on the South Rim in our area. It is brushy and full, rounded, many stemmed and usually about six feet tall, though it grows to a small tree 18 feet tall. The stems are gray or rosy in color and appear quite straight. Leaves are round and serrated on the distal edge--the side away from the stem. Leaves average about 3/4 inch long. They turn yellow and drop in the fall.



Utah Serviceberry

  Like many South Rim plants, it is delightful to see the serviceberry leaf out and bloom. This occurs at higher and higher levels of the Canyon walls as spring progresses, starting as early as March in the Hermit Shale. Late summer and fall rains can induce blooming and fruiting even after frost has set in.   The flower clusters are a favorite of mule deer and other browsers. Later, the purple berries continue to nourish animals and people. Indians used the berries extensively for food, especially in pemmican, their brand of "trail mix". Fruits are used by the Navajo as an emetic and for skin wounds. Serviceberry wood is hard and flexible, useful for many implements including bows and snowshoes.









Up to Trees and Shrubs Ponderosa Pine Pinyon Pine Utah Juniper Gambel Oak Douglas-fir
Cliffrose Apache Plume Mormon Tea Utah Serviceberry Fernbush Wax Currant Big Sagebrush
Fremont Barberry Rabbit Brush Banana Yucca; Utah Agave Mountain Mahogany Blueberry Elder
Rock Mat Brickellbush Buffalo Berry