20. Berberis pinnata Lagasca, Elench. Pl.  14.  1816.   
Mahonia pinnata (Lagasca) Fedde
Shrubs , evergreen, 0.3-1.6(-7) m.  Stems  usually monomorphic, seldom with short axillary shoots.  Bark  of 2d-year stems grayish brown, glabrous.  Bud scales  3-7 mm, deciduous.  Spines  absent.  Leaves  (3-)5-13-foliolate; petioles 0.5-4.5(-7.5) cm.  Leaflet blades  thin and ± rigid or flexible; surfaces abaxially glossy, smooth, adaxially glossy, green; terminal leaflet stalked, blade 2.6-6.2 × 2-4.5 cm, 1.3-1.9 times as long as wide; lateral leaflet blades elliptic to ovate or broadly lanceolate, 1(-3)-veined from base, base broadly obtuse, truncate, or weakly cordate, margins plane to crispate, toothed, each with 5-22 teeth 0-2 mm tipped with spines to 1-3 × 0.1-0.3 mm, apex acute to rounded-obtuse.  Inflorescences  racemose, dense, 25-50-flowered, 2-9 cm; bracteoles membranous, apex rounded to broadly acute, sometimes apiculate.  Anther filaments  with distal pair of recurved lateral teeth.  Berries  blue, glaucous, oblong-ovoid to subspheric, 6-7 mm, juicy, solid.
Berberis pinnata is very similar to B . aquifolium , and the two are sometimes difficult to separate. Some authors have used the spacing of the lateral leaflets (said to be contiguous or imbricate in B . pinnata and remote in B . aquifolium ) to separate them, but the leaflets are often remote in both species and may be contiguous in B . aquifolium .
Berberis pinnata is resistant to infection by Puccinia graminis .