Lecture - Plant and Family Details List Flashcards

1
Q

Magnoliaceae

A

Small family

Trees and shrubs. Simple leaves.

Large flowers usually borne singly.

Fruits are aggregates of follicles or samaras.

Distinctive rings around the stem.

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2
Q

Magnolia virginiana

A

Sweetbay
Magnoliaceae

Form: Tree
Height: Medium height
Spread: ½ - 1x height
Spacing: same as spread
Zones: Coastline NJ - deep south
Flowers: white, lemon scented - strong. May – June

Uses: Great small patio tree/Specimen tree. Flowers bloom later than most other Magnolias.

Culture: full sun - full shade. Plant only in the spring. Tolerates wet soils

Limitations: Informal. Low density of flowers

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3
Q

Magnolia virginiana cultivar

A

Magnolia virginiana ‘Henry Hicks’
Henry Hicks sweetbay

Remains evergreen all winter even in cold climates. Denser growth habit

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4
Q

Liriodendron tulipifera

A

tulip tree
Magnoliaceae

Form: Tree
Height: Very tall - canopy topper
Spread: 30’ – 50’
Spacing: ditto
Zones: Maine/Canada to TX & FL
Flowers: yellow and orange hard to see in the canopy May – June
Fall Color: yellow

Uses: Specimen tree, Shade Tree

Culture: Full sun. Typical soil. Easily transplanted. Best planted in spring.

Limitations Too big for most urban or residential locations. Fleshy roots, somewhat shallow. Weak wood; self-pruning. Flowers too high in tree for showy effect

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5
Q

Annonaceae

A

Pretty big

All forms except herbs.

Leaves typically alternate, simple.

Vegetative buds naked, elongate. Twigs tend to dry to a black color. Twigs and young stems often zigzag.

Flowers nearly always pendulous. Petals appear similar to sepals, in 3 sets of 3.

Fruit a berry. Seeds are large.

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6
Q

Asimina triloba

A

paw paw
Annonaceae

Height: Shortish
Spread: Same as height
Spacing: Doesn’t need room
Zones: Canada to TX & FL
Flower Color: maroon-purple, May
Fruit Color: yellowish green, edible, September – October
Fall Color: Yellow

Uses: Naturalizing, Edible Fruits, Street Tree

Culture: Full sun - shade. Needs moist, fertile, well-drained soils. Does best in slightly acid soils. Tends to sucker from the roots – not an ideal plant for small spaces

Limitations: Difficult to transplant when large. Fruits can be a slight maintenance problem but often harvested by raccoons

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7
Q

Lauraceae

A

Big: Few genera, many species

Deciduous trees and shrubs, herbaceous parasites. Aromatic vegetation. Alternate entire leaves, often thick bladed.

Small, inconspicuous flowers with parts in threes. Flowers radially symmetrical, petals and sepals fused only at the base. Petals and sepals similar. Anthers with flaps at the tips.

Fruit a berry or drupe with single, large seed.

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8
Q

Lindera benzoin

A

spicebush
Lauraceae

Form: Shrub
Height: Slightly above head
Spread: About a tall person
Spacing: ditto
Zones: 4 – 9
Flower Color: greenish-yellow (dioecious), fragrant Late March – Early April
Fruit Color: Scarlet (♀)
Fall Color: Yellow

Uses: Specimen Border, Naturalizing, All parts are spicy (leaves and fruits can be made into tea)

Culture: Full sun to full shade, best with some shade. Typical soil. Best in acidic soil (pH 4.5 – 6). Difficult to transplant

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9
Q

Sassafras albidum

A

sassafras
Lauraceae

Form: Tree
Height: Tallish
Spread: About same as height
Spacing: ditto
Zones: Maine to Florida
Flower Color: yellow, small but fragrant Mid – May
Fruit Color: Blue on red stalks August – September
Fall Color: Brilliant orange-scarlet or yellow

Uses: Natively grows in thickets or hedgerows. Makes nice lawn specimen. Seasoning. Food plant for swallowtail butterflies

Culture: Typical, acid soils. Full sun to light shade

Limitations: Few problems. Tap root - difficult to transplant large individuals. Root suckers need controlling. Iron chlorosis in high pH soils

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10
Q

Lardizabalaceae

A

Small family

All vines.

Flowers unisexual; plants monoecious or dioecious.

The medium-sized, three-parted flowers have the petals and stamens opposite each other.

Ovaries are separate from one another and the fruits are more or less fleshy, or sometimes are follicles.

Leaves compound.

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11
Q

Akebia quinata

A

five-leaf akebia
Lardizabalaceae

Form: Vine
Height: pretty high
Spread: Fairly aggressive
Don’t plant
Zones: MA to SC

Fall Color: Deep green (semi-evergreen foliage)

Culture: Full sun or light shade. Tolerant of a wide range of soil conditions – moist or dry. Readily transplanted

Limitations: Invasive tendencies but no legal invasive status in MD (assessment in progress). Grows rapidly and kills the plants it climbs on

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12
Q

Ranunculaceae

A

Big family - few genera, many species

Herbs (mostly) or vines (Clematis)

Sepals often resemble petals

Leaves typically lobed or compound, lacking stipules

Special nectar producing structures called nectaries

Leaves alternate in all genera except Clematis

Flowers typically perfect (having both male and female parts); Clematis has separate male and female flowers

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13
Q

Clematis terniflora

A

sweet autumn clematis
Ranunculaceae

Form: Vine
Height: Moderate
Spread: Not much
Spacing: don’t plant
Zones: MA-SC, FL in shade

Flower Color: White, fragrant, August – October
Fruit Color: Silver – White
Fall Color: Green

Uses: Vine, climbs by twining. Screen

Culture: Full sun to partial shade. Thrives on neglect. Tolerates seashore conditions. Grows in acid or alkaline soil. No significant pests

Limitations: “Vigorous to the point of viciousness” “Engulfs every structure in sight” Difficult to get rid of once established

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14
Q

Berberidaceae

A

14 Genera 701 species

Shrubs or perennial herbs

Leaves simple or odd-pinnately compound

Plants or leaves often spiny-toothed

Flowers bisexual, radially symmetrical

Parts in 4’s to 6’s

Fruit a berry Inner bark and wood commonly yellow

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15
Q

Berberis thunbergii

A

Japanese barberry
Berberidaceae

Form: Shrub
Height: Person-high
Spread: about same
Spacing: cheak-to-cheak
Zones: Maine-NC or Georgia if in shade
Flower Color: Yellow with reddish outside - May
Fruit Color: red - Fall, winter
Fall Color: Scarlet

Uses: Borders, Hedges, Mass plantings, Barrier plant

Culture: Best in full sun, tolerates partial shade. Needs well-drained soils. Exceptionally adaptable. Tolerates drought and heat. Tolerates urban conditions. Transplants easily. Deer resistant! Few pests

Limitations: Straight species MD Tier 2 invasive (6/23/2020)

Plant breeding developments:

Dr. Mark Brand, University of Connecticut produced among others: Berberis thunbergii ‘UCONNBTCP4N’ PP30,095 WorryFree® Crimson Cutie® barberry

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16
Q

Berberis thunbergii cultivars

A

Berberis thunbergii var. atropurpurea

red leaf Japanese barberry:

A naturally-occurring variety that has reddish foliage that tends to fade to green during the summer. Most red foliaged cultivars are derived from this variety. B. t. var. a. ‘Nana’ = synonym to ‘Crimson Pygmy’ - Crimson Pygmy barberry

Berberis thunbergii ‘Rose Glow’

rose glow barberry:

New foliage mottled rose pink with deeper red purple. Fall color lasts longer than in the species.

Berberis thunbergii ‘Aurea’

golden barberry:

Leaves vivid yellow, does not scorch in sun even in southern landscapes; yellow-green in shade. Dense, slow-growing. Does not flower or fruit heavily.

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17
Q

Platanaceae

A

Extremely small family

Large trees. Bark exfoliates in characteristic plates.

Leaves simple, alternate, lobed. Stipules leaf-like and completely surround the stem. Axillary buds enclosed by petiole base.

Flowers and fruits in dense, spherical heads. Male and female flowers separate. Sepals, petals, and anthers in 4’s

Fruit cluster of achenes each with a tuft of hairs.

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18
Q

Platanus occidentalis

A

sycamore
Platanaceae

Height: super tall
Spread: almost as wide
Spacing: ditto
Zones: Maine to FL

Uses: Shade tree, Specimen, Street Tree

Culture: Full Sun, Adaptable but grows best in rich moist soils. Tolerates urban conditions. Easily transplanted. Tolerates high and low pH soils. Leave if you have one – however better options in most landscape settings

Limitations: Shallow root system makes them susceptible to drought. Extremely messy (leaves, fruit, twigs). Anthracnose Powdery mildew. Many other disease problems. Too large for many situations. Roots impact built features such as pavement, pipes, foundations

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19
Q

Sycamore Anthracnose

Apiognomonia veneta (Discula platani)

A

Leaf blight
Thin canopy
Twig lesions
Twig blight

Managing and Controlling:

  • Remove symptomatic tissue in fall and winter
  • Maintain tree vigor through proper watering and fertilizing
  • Treat with fungicide if absolutely necessary
  • At or just before bud break in spring (foliar or injection)
  • If you can see symptoms on leaves it is too late to treat.
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20
Q

Platanus ×acerifolia

A

London plane tree
Platanaceae

Platanus occidentalis × Platanus orientalis

Height: Tallish - good for streets
Spread: same
Spacing: same
Zones: (Maine) Upper NY - Georgia (FL)

Uses: Street tree. Shade tree. Parks, golf courses

Culture: Same as P. occidentalis. Extremely tolerant of many conditions including urban

Limitations: Approaching monoculture plantings in many places. Variable susceptibility to many diseases including powdery mildew and anthracnose

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21
Q

Comparison of sycamore, oriental plane tree, and London plane tree

A
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22
Q

Platanus ×acerifolia cultivars

A

Platanus ×acerifolia ‘Bloodgood’

Bloodgood plane tree

Greater resistance to anthracnose than unselected P. ×acerifolia, But more recently has shown susceptibility. Not ozone tolerant – late summer stippling and leaf drop

Platanus ×acerifolia ‘Liberty’ and Platanus ×acerifolia ‘Columbia’

  • Resulted from controlled crosses of symptomless Platanus orientalis × two susceptible Platanus occidentalis
  • Progeny were exposed to anthracnose and evaluated for susceptibility.
  • Symptom free clones were evaluated for growth form, landscape
    attributes, and tolerance of street conditions.
  • Highly resistant to anthracnose and powdery mildew
  • Resist inward spread of wood decay by compartmentalizing damage
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23
Q

Cercidiphyllaceae

A

Tiny family

Trees.
Male and female flower separate.
Plants dioecious.
Flowers lack petals. Sepals on male
flower minute.
Fruit a follicle.
Leaves opposite to alternate on same
plant.
Leaves simple with primary veins
palmate.
Spur shoots present.

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24
Q

Cercidiphyllum japonicum

katsura tree

Cercidiphyllaceae

A

Form: Tree
Height: 45’ – 55’ (100’)
Spread: 30’ – 40’
Spacing: 30’ – 40’
Zones: 4 – 8
Flower Color: n.s., reddish, March – April
Fruit Color: n.s., tan – brown, persist all winter
Fall Color: yellow to apricot

Uses: Elegant shade tree, Specimen tree, Planted in groves. Plant in large spaces: large lawns, parks, golf courses

Culture: Best fall color in full sun. Best in rich, moist well-drained soil. Needs water in extended drought, especially when young pH adaptable

Limitations: No severe pests. Not easy to transplant. Large size limits planting locations

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25
Q

Iteaceae

A

2 Genera 18 Species

Trees to shrubs
Pith chambered
Leaves alternate, spirally arranged
Leaves evergreen or deciduous
Leaf margins serrate, sometimes with glands at the tips of the teeth
Stipules small, on leaf base or adjacent stem
With superposed axillary buds
Inflorescence: spikes, racemes or panicles in leaf axils
Flowers small, sepals and petals in fives
Sepals and petals fused to form a hypanthium
Fruit a capsule

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26
Q

Itea virginica

A

Virginia sweetspire
Iteaceae

Form: Shrub
Height: 3’ – 5’
Spread: 5’ – 10’
Spacing: 5’ – 10’
Zones: 5 – 9
Flower Color: White, fragrant June - July
Fruit Color: n.s. brown capsule
Fall Color: yellow, to orange, to scarlet, to purple

Uses: Shrub borders. Foundation plants. Naturalizing in moist areas

Culture: Full sun to full shade. Prefers moist, fertile soils. Tolerates wet or dry soils. Prefers acidic to neutral soils. Very easy to propagate from cuttings

Limitations: No serious pests or diseases. Not tolerant of extensive drought until it is well established. Can spread beyond intended area if soils are very moist.

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27
Q

Itea virginica ‘Henry’s Garnet’

Henry’s Garnet sweetspire

A

Fall Color: deep red purple, lasts longer than for species
Flowers showier
More cold tolerant (to Zone 3)

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28
Q

Hamamelidaceae

A

27 Genera 82 species

Trees and shrubs.
Stellate or tufted hairs.
Leaves mostly alternate, simple.
Leaves often with entire margins at the base, toothed above.
Strongly stipulate leaves.
Smallish flowers often in dense clusters.
Petals often strap shaped.
Ovary at least partly inferior.
Fruit a capsule or aggregate of capsules.
Seeds often with ballistic dispersal.

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29
Q

Liquidambar styraciflua

A

sweetgum
Hamamelidaceae (now Altingiaceae)

Form: Tree
Height: 50’ – 70’ (100+)
Spread: 25’ – 40’
Spacing: 25’ – 40’
Zones: 5 – 9
Flower Color: n.s April - May
Fruit Color: green in summer, brown in fall
Fall Color: Scarlet, yellow, orange

Uses: Shade tree, Avenue tree, Specimen Windbreaks

Culture: Full sun to partial shade. Soils ≤ pH 7. Prefers moist soils but widely adaptable to a variety of conditions once established. Moderately drought resistant

Limitations: Fruits drop endlessly with high viability. Aggressive, shallow root system lifts sidewalks and curbs. Extremely sensitive to construction activities. No serious pests or diseases. Difficult to transplant when large

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30
Q

Liquidambar styraciflua cultivars

A

Liquidambar styraciflua ‘Burgundy’
burgundy sweetgum
Wine-red color in fall and on new leaves. Leaves may persist into winter

Liquidambar styraciflua ‘Festival’
festival sweetgum
More conical, narrow and upright than the species. Less cold hardy (7 – 9).

Liquidambar styraciflua ‘Rotundiloba’
rotund sweetgum
Rounded lobe tips. Fruitless. Yellow to orange fall color some years, burgundy others; narrow pyramidal form. Not reliably hardy in Zone 5. Original tree discovered in the wild in North Carolina in 1930

31
Q

Fothergilla gardenii

A

dwarf fothergilla
Hamamelidaceae

Form: Shrub
Height: 3’ – 5’
Spread: 6’
Spacing: 4’ – 5’
Zones: (4)5 – 8(9)
Flower Color: White, fragrant; stamens showy Late March – early April
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: Yellow to Orange to Red

Uses: Shrub border, Foundation plants, Mass plantings, Naturalized settings

Culture: Grows in full sun to shade. Needs full sun to develop fall color. Prefers moist soils but will not tolerate standing water. Does best in acidic soils

Limitations: Relatively trouble free. Drought stress in hot dry situations, avoid windy sites

32
Q

Hamamelis virginiana

A

common witchhazel
Hamamelidaceae

Form: Small Tree
Height: 7’ – 10’
Spread: 15’ – 20’ (30’)
Spacing: 8’ – 15’
Zones: 3b – 8(9)
Flower Color: Yellow, fragrant, Oct. – Dec.
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: light yellow

Uses: Patio Tree, Screen, Border

Culture: Performs well in shade. Full sun for best fall color and bloom. Great variation in adaptability. Not very tolerant of high pH

Limitations: No serious pest or diseases. Does not tolerate extremely dry conditions

33
Q

Vitaceae

A

14 genera, 850 species

Mostly vines.
Leaves alternate.
Leaves with palmately
compound, lobed, or veined
blades.
Leaves with stipules that fall
early.
Commonly with tendrils or
inflorescences opposite the
leaves.
Stems often with lots of
lenticels.
Inflorescence a cyme and small
flowers.
Fruit a berry.

34
Q

Ampelopsis brevipedunculata

A

porcelain berry
Vitaceae

Form: Vine
Height: 25’+
Spread: 25’+
Spacing: 0
Zones: 4 – 8
Flowers: n.s., greenish-white
Fruit Color: yellow to lilac to bright blue
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: None recommended. In the past used for showy berries. Climbing over trellises and fences

Culture: Best in full sun to partial shade. Transplants readily. Needs support. Extremely fast growing. Tolerates dry soils

Limitations Invasive habits but no legal invasive status in MD. Covers other species

35
Q

Ampelopsis brevipedunculata ‘Elegans’

A

Variegated leaves when grown in the sun.

More deeply lobed leaves.

More compact growth habit.

Slightly less aggressive than the species.

36
Q

Parthenocissus quinquefolia

A

Virginia creeper
Vitaceae

Form: Vine
Height: 30’ – 50’
Spread: 30’ – 50’
Spacing: 30’ – 50’
Zones: 4 – 9
Flowers: n.s., greenish-white
Fruit Color: Purple violet, Sept. – Oct.
Fall Color: Brilliant red

Uses: Climbing over walls, fences and trellises

Culture: Grows in full sun to full shade. Tolerant of the most trying conditions. Will grow at the seashore

Limitations: Not strong enough for use on buildings. Can easily get away from you and considered a weed by many. Susceptible to leaf spot. Susceptible to canker

37
Q

Parthenocissus tricuspidata

A

Boston ivy
Vitaceae

Form: Vine
Height: 40’ – 60’+
Spread: 30’+
Spacing: 10’ – 30’
Zones: 4 – 8
Flowers: n.s.
Fruit Color: Bluish black berries in fall
Fall Color: Dark red

Uses: Wall covering - holds well on buildings Climate control in buildings

Culture: Grows in full sun to full shade. Tolerant of trying conditions. Tolerant of salt

Liabilities: Can become invasive. Susceptible to Japanese beetle. Tendrils and adhesive discs hard to remove from buildings. Not good on trellises or fences

38
Q

Lythraceae

A

31 genera, 620 species

Corolla is often crumpled in bud – petals are “crinkly”.
Petals “clawed”.
Often 10+ stamens of unequal length.
Calyx is thick and ribbed.
Fruit a dry capsule.
Opposite to sub-opposite leaves.
Often with exfoliating bark.

39
Q

Lagerstroemia fauriei

A

Fauriei crapemyrtle
Lythraceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: 20’ – 25’
Spread: 15’ – 20’
Spacing: 15’
Zone: (6)7 – 9
Flower Color: white (not exceptional) - Summer
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: Red

Uses: Specimen, Accent, Patio tree. Spectacular exfoliating bark

Culture: Best in full sun. Prefers well drained soils. Resistant to powdery mildew

Limitations: Flowers not exceptional. Non-recurrent flowering

40
Q

Lagerstroemia indica

A

crapemyrtle
Lythraceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: 15’ – 20’
Spread: 15’ – 20’
Spacing: 10’ – 20’
Zone: 7 – 9
Flower Color: profuse bloom; white, pink, red - August - frost
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: Yellow – orange – red
Bark: Tan

Uses: Specimen, Accent, Patio tree. Recurrent flowering: profuse and prolonged summer bloom

Culture: Full sun. Prefers acidic soil. Best in loamy, moist well-drained soils. Blooms on new growth. No insect problems. Transplant in spring

Limitations: Susceptible to powdery mildew. Can be cold damaged in Zone 6

41
Q

Pruning Lagerstroemia

A

Remove flowering stalks after bloom to encourage second blooming

Prune vegetative stalks in spring or summer (before August) to ensure winter hardiness

Remove all but 3-4 main stems

42
Q

Lagerstroemia Cultivar Selections

A

Breeding began at the National Arboretum in 1962 to increase disease resistance within Lagerstroemia indica.

A few examples….
Lagerstroemia indica ‘Catawba’
Lagerstroemia indica ‘Cherokee’
Lagerstroemia indica ‘Conestoga’
Lagerstroemia indica ‘Powhatan’
Lagerstroemia indica ‘Potomac’
Lagerstroemia indica ‘Seminole’

43
Q

Lagerstroemia hybrids

A

Lagerstroemia indica

  • Pro: Recurrent blooming
  • Con: Powdery mildew

Lagerstroemia fauriei

  • Pro: No powdery mildew
  • Con: No recurrent bloom

Hybrids:

  • Resistant to powdery mildew
  • Different size groups
  • New bark colors
  • Recurrent bloom
  • Potentially increased hardiness
44
Q

Lagerstroemia cultivars - hybrids

A

Lagerstroemia fauriei arrived in the U.S. in the 1950s.

Lagerstroemia indica × Lagerstroemia fauriei

Lagerstroemia × ‘Acoma’
Lagerstroemia × ‘Lipan’
Lagerstroemia × ‘Sioux’
Lagerstroemia × ‘Tonto’
Lagerstroemia × ‘Yuma’
Lagerstroemia × ‘Chickasaw’
Lagerstroemia × ‘Pocomoke’

Five original plants and their progeny intercrossed for five generations.

The first cross was made in 1967

Final cross was made in 1989

‘Chickasaw‘ was released 1997

‘Pocomoke’ was released in 1998

45
Q

Lagerstroemia × ‘Natchez’

A

Natchez crapemyrtle
Lythraceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: to 21’
Spread: 21’ – 30’
Spacing: 10’ – 20’
Zone: (6)7 – 9
Flower Color: White
July - Frost
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: Orange – bronze
Bark: Cinnamon brown

Differences from L. indica:

  • Spectacular exfoliating bark
  • Resistant to powdery mildew

Differences from L. fauriei:

  • Recurrent blooming
46
Q

Bignoniaceae

A

110 genera, 800 species

All are woody.
Stems with lenticels.
Most have opposite leaves.
Leaves may be simple or compound.
Flowers are bilaterally symmetrical and often large.
Petals fused into a tube.
Fruit a capsule with many seeds.
Seeds are usually flattened and winged.

47
Q

Campsis radicans

A

trumpetcreeper / trumpet vine
Bignoniaceae

Form: Vine
Height: 30’ – 40’
Spread: 15’ – 30’
Spacing: 10’ – 15’
Zones: 4 – 9
Flower Color: Orange to scarlet.
Fruit Color: n.s. Green, 3” – 5” long
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Climbing on walls and trellises. Can form nice boundaries. Accent. Specimen. Espalier

Culture: Grows in full sun to partial shade. Tolerates trying conditions. Tolerates seashore conditions.

Liabilities: Can spread VERY rapidly. Very hard to get rid of once established. Not a strong climber – holds on by aerial rootlets

48
Q

Campsis radicans cultivars

A

Campsis ×tagliabuana ‘Madame Galen’ hybrid trumpet creeper

Campsis radicans × Campsis grandiflora

  • Larger flowers and more flowers than C. radicans
  • Not as cold hardy as C. radicans (Zones 5 – 9)
49
Q

Catalpa bignonioides

A

Southern Catalpa
Bignoniaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 45’
Spread: 45’ - 55’
Spacing: 45’ – 55’
Zones: 5 – 9
Flower Color: White with yellow and purple spots
Fruit Color: Green to brown, straight slender pod.
Fall Color: n.s.

  • Similar to Catalpa speciosa
  • Smaller
  • Flowers ~ 2 weeks later
50
Q

Catalpa bignonioides cultivar

A

Catalpa bignonioides ‘Nana’

51
Q

Catalpa speciosa

A

northern catalpa
Bignoniaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 50’ – 60’ (90’)
Spread: 25’ – 35’ (40’ – 50’)
Spacing: 25’ – 35’ (40’ – 50’)
Zones: 4 – 8
Flower Color: White with yellow and purple spots
Fruit Color: Green to brown pod. Pod slightly curved.
Fall Color: Yellow, not spectacular.

Uses: Specimen tree. Shade tree. Great flowers

Culture: Full sun to partial shade. Drought tolerant. Tolerant of many soil conditions

Limitations: Needs large area for best effect. Fruits can be maintenance problem. Can be weedy. Susceptible to powdery mildew

52
Q

Paulowniaceae

A

1 Genus 6 Species

Trees.
Leaves opposite.
Inflorescences terminal.
Flowers large, bilaterally symmetrical.
Calyx lobes fused to one another, corolla lobes fused.
The calyx is densely brown tomentose.
Fruit a capsule.
Seeds winged.

53
Q

Paulownia tomentosa

A

empress tree
Paulowniaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 45’ – 60’
Spread: 30’ – 40’
Spacing: 30’ – 40’
Zones: (5)6 – 9
Flower Color: Pale violet, fragrant - Mid-May
Fruit Color: n.s. brown capsules
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Not recommended. Shade tree in the past

Culture: Full sun to partial shade. Extremely rapidly growing. Prefers moist, well drained soils but tolerates a range of conditions. Tolerates pollution. Tolerates seashore conditions. Needs protection from wind.

Limitations: Messy, leaves drop over long period. Fruits look unkempt. Coarse. Dense canopy excludes other plants. Invasive habits (2000+ seeds per capsule; MD assess in progress)

54
Q

Verbenaceae

A

34 genera, 1175 species

Vines, trees, shrubs, or herbs.
Stems often square.
Leaves opposite and simple
or palmately compound.
All parts strongly scented.
Flowers bilaterally symmetrical.
Petals fused.
Typically with 4 stamens.
Ovary with four ovules.

55
Q

Caryopteris ×clandonensis

A

bluebeard
Verbenaceae

Caryopteris incana × Caryopteris mongholica

Form: Shrub
Height: 3’ – 5’
Spread: 2’ – 3’
Spacing: 2’ – 3’
Zone: 6 – 9
Flower Color: Blue
July – Sept.
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Massing. Low border. Flowers late in summer. Leaves stems and flowers fragrant

Culture: Tolerates heat and drought. Full sun. Tolerates seashore conditions (sandy and salty soils). Can be cut to the ground, flowers on new wood. Best in well drained soil. Transplants easily

Limitations: Needs to be pruned hard or it can be leggy and unattractive. Weedy, may seed into areas if not deadheaded

56
Q

Callicarpa japonica

A

Japanese beautyberry
Verbenaceae

Form: Shrub
Height: 4’– 8’
Spread: 4’– 6’
Spacing: 3’– 6’
Zones: 5–8
Flower Color: n.s. pink, white or lavender. - July - August
Fruit Color: Violet to metallic purple. Fall
Fall Color: Yellow

Uses: Same uses as C. dichotoma but C. japonica may benefit from cross pollination for fruit production

Culture: same. Transplants easily. Well-drained soil. Full sun to light shade

Limitations: Irregular fruiting in C. japonica. Can look ratty with age – rejuvenates well

57
Q

Callicarpa japonica cultivar

A

Callicarpa japonica ‘Leucocarpa’
white-fruited Japanese beautyberry

Callicarpa dichotoma ‘Early Amethyst’
early amethyst purple beautyberry

Callicarpa dichotoma ‘Duet’

58
Q

Vitex agnus-castus

A

chaste tree
Verbenaceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: 10’ – 12’
Spread: 16’
Spacing: 5’ – 15’
Zone: (6)7 – 8(9)
Flower Color: Lilac – purple, fragrant. June – Aug.
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: n.s

Uses: Specimen. Massing. Screen. Border. Aromatic foliage

Culture: Tolerates heat and drought. Easily transplanted. No severe insect or disease problems

Limitations: Exotic looking but difficult to combine with other shrubs. Not hardy north of New York City. Can be invasive

59
Q

Vitex negundo var. heterophylla

A

cutleaf chaste tree
Verbenaceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: 10’ – 15’
Spread: 15’ – 20’
Spacing: 10’ – 20’
Zone: 6 – 8
Flower Color: Lavender
June – Sept.
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Specimen or border. More delicate texture and better form than V. agnus-castus. Hardier than V. agnus-castus. Aromatic foliage

Culture: Tolerates heat and drought. Easily transplanted. No severe insect or disease problems. Needs full sun

Limitations: Flowers not as showy as V. agnuscastus but leaves add interest

60
Q

Oleaceae

A

24 Genera 615 species

Trees and shrubs.
Opposite leaves.
Simple or odd-pinnately compound leaves.
No stipules.
Stem somewhat enlarged and flattened at the nodes, but no line across the node.
Lenticels obvious, often raised.
Flowers with 4 sepals and 4 fused petals (or none), 2 anthers.
Flowers unisexual or perfect.

61
Q

Chionanthus retusus

A

Chinese fringe tree
Oleaceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: 20’ – 30’
Spread: 20’ – 30’
Spacing: 20’ – 30’
Zones: (5)6 – 8
Flower Color: White, fragrant - June
Fruit Color: Blue-black on ♀ plants
Fall Color: Soft yellow, not consistent

Uses: Specimen plant, especially in small sites. Can plant spring flowering species underneath it

Culture: One of the last plants to leaf out in spring. Tolerates partial shade, best in full sun. Best in moist well drained, organic soil but adaptable. Air pollution tolerant. Drought tolerant. Flowers on current season’s growth

Limitations: None significant. Not as cold hardy as Chionanthus virginicus

62
Q

Chionanthus virginicus

A

fringe tree
Oleaceae

Form: Shrub to Tree
Height: 10’ – 15’
Spread: 10’ – 15’
Spacing: 10’ – 15’
Zones: 4 – 9
Flower Color: White, fragrant; ♂ flowers larger, more effective - May - June
Fruit Color: Blue-black on ♀
Fall Color: Yellow

Uses: Large shrub to small tree. Specimen plant, especially in small sites. Can plant spring flowering species underneath it

Culture: One of the last plants to leaf out in spring. Tolerates partial shade, best in full sun. Best in moist well drained, organic soil but adaptable. Prefers acidic soils. Air pollution tolerant. Flowers on previous season’s growth

Limitations: None significant. Male plant needed to set fruits. Slightly less showy than C. retusus as flowers are held below leaves v. terminal

63
Q

Fraxinus americana

A

white ash
Oleaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 40’ – 50’ (100’)
Spread: 30’ – 50’
Spacing: 30’ – 50’
Zones: 4 – 9
Flower Color: n.s. - April
Fruit Color: n.s. green samara, on ♀ plants
Fall Color: yellow to purple or maroon

Uses: Shade tree. Avenue tree. Grows more slowly than green ash but ultimately is larger with better structure

Culture: Widely adaptable to various soils and climates. Tolerates moderately poor, dry soil. Prefers full sun

Limitations: Not as adaptable as green ash. Weak branch angles. Many diseases and insect pests:

  • Ash yellows
  • Banded ash clearwing moth borers
  • Emerald ash borer
64
Q

Fraxinus americana cultivars

A

Fraxinus americana ‘Junginger’ Autumn Purple®

Male, therefore seedless

Reddish-purple fall color

65
Q

Fraxinus excelsior

A

European ash
Oleaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 30’ – 40’
Spread: 25’ – 35’ (–90’)
Spacing: 25’ – 35’ (–90’)
Zones: 5 – 7
Flower Color: n.s. - April
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: clear yellow

Uses: Specimen tree

Culture: Prefers rich, loamy soil. Full sun to half sun. Tolerates high pH soils

Limitations: Borers. Large Size

66
Q

Fraxinus pennsylvanica

A

green ash
Oleaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 50 – 60’ (80’)
Spread: 30’ – 40’
Spacing: 30’ – 40’
Zones: (2b)3 – 9
Flower Color: n.s. April
Fruit Color: n.s. green then brown on ♀ trees
Fall Color: yellow

Uses: Shade tree. Street tree. Specimen tree

Culture: Full sun to partial shade. Tolerates poor soils. Tolerates high pH. Tolerates urban conditions: road salt, compacted soils. Grows quickly (2’ – 3’/year). More upright and irregular in growth than white ash

Limitations: Fertile and abundant seed. Emerald ash borer. Banded ash clearwing moth. Scale. Ash yellows

67
Q

Fraxinus pennsylvanica cultivar

A

Fraxinus pennsylvanica ‘Patmore’ Patmore green ash

Selected from seedlings from Alberta, Canada Male clone = fruitless
Very cold hardy to -40 degrees
Leaves persist longer into fall
Straight trunk and uniform symmetrical branching

68
Q

Ligustrum obtusifolium var. regelianum

A

Regel privet
Oleaceae

Form: Shrub
Height: 4’ – 5’
Spread: 6’ – 10’
Spacing: 6’ – 10’
Zones: 4 – 7
Flower Color: n.s., white, unpleasantly scented - Late May –early June
Fruit Color: blue-black
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Informal hedge. Border. Screen. Considered to have the best form of the Ligustrums

Culture: Full sun to partial shade. Tolerates salt from roads. Extremely tolerant of poor, dry soils. Branches grow horizontally

Limitations: Tier 2 MD Invasive plant. Does not do well to the south of us. Foul smelling flowers

69
Q

Ligustrum ovalifolium

A

California privet
Oleaceae

Form: Shrub
Height: 10’ – 15’
Spread: 8’ – 12’
Spacing: 3’ – 10’
Zones: 5 – 7(8)
Flower Color: white - Late May
Fruit Color: globose, black, minimally produced
Fall Color: green (semievergreen here)

Uses: Shrub. Outstanding formal hedge. Border

Culture: Sun to partial shade. Tolerates salt from roads. Branches grow vertically

Limitations: Not reliably hardy north of New York City. Foul smelling flowers

70
Q

Ligustrum ×vicaryi

A

golden vicary privet
Oleaceae

Ligustrum ovalifolium ‘Aureum’ × Ligustrum vulgare

Height: 12’
Spread: 10’
Spacing: 2’ – 10’
Zones: 5 – 8
Flower Color: White
Fruit Color: Blue black
Fall Color: Golden yellow

Uses: Same as other privets. Yellow foliage

Culture: Needs full sun to develop good color. Best heavily pruned. Plant with dark colored plants for best effect

Limitations: Not effective planted by itself. Shaded leaves turn sickly green

71
Q

Syringa reticulata

A

Japanese tree lilac
Oleaceae

Form: Tree
Height: 20’ – 30’
Spread: 15’ – 25’
Spacing: 15’ – 20’
Zones: 3 – 7
Flower Color: white, foul smelling (privet-like) Early – to mid–June
Fruit Color: n.s., green capsules
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Most trouble free lilac. Specimen tree. Street tree. Mass plantings

Culture: Full sun for good flowering. pH adaptable. Easily transplanted. Prefers cool summers. Prune after flowering

Limitations: Fewer problems than other lilacs. Powdery mildew. Leaf blight. Borers. Frost injury to young leaves. Foul smelling flowers

72
Q

Loganiaceae

A

14 genera 420 species

Annual herbs to shrubs or vines.
Leaves opposite, joined by line.
Flowers with parts in 4’s- or 5’s.
Flowers somewhat bilaterally symmetrical.
Petals fused together into a tube.
Sepals fused.
Seeds without wings.

73
Q

Buddleia davidii
butterfly bush
Loganiaceae

A

Form: Shrub
Height: 6’ – 8’ (15’)
Spread: 6’ – 10’
Spacing: 6’ – 10’
Zone: 5 – 9
Flower Color: white, pink, purple, red
Fruit Color: n.s.
Fall Color: n.s.

Uses: Shrub. border. Massing. Flowers profusely in late summer and fall. Flowers attract butterflies

Culture: Full sun. Tolerates moderate ocean front conditions. Heavy pruning yields fewer, larger flowers. Well drained soil best. pH adaptable. Blooms in one year from seed

Limitations: Too coarse to be used in most situations, although small and more refined selections have been made. Can be invasive if not deadheaded or sterile cultivar