apiculatus - Cranberry Cotoneaster () ------Cotoneaster apiculatus is a low arching to mounding , with glossy small and prominent -red, maturing in late Aug. and a very effective globular red fruits. Cranberry Cotoneaster is often contrast in late summer and early autumn while the utilized as an edging or facer shrub or as a tall foliage is still a glossy dark green groundcover. -0.25" diameter and persistent into early winter -effective display when in mass plantings FEATURES Twigs Form -red-purple with persistent pubescence -low sprawling -older stems olive-brown and lenticeled shrub or -branches continuously arching with numerous side moderately tall branchlets woody groundcover -buds very small -maturing at 1.5' tall Trunk x 5' wide -not applicable -arching mound and spreading mound USAGE growth habit, with Function branches sometimes -shrub or groundcover effective as an edging, facer, rooting as they touch the ground embankment, mass planting, low barrier, foundation, wall, or -slow growth rate raised planter (short cascading effect) woody Culture Texture -full sun to partial shade -fine texture in foliage but medium when bare -prefers moist, well-drained soils but is very urban -open density in foliage and when bare stress tolerant, including poor soils, soil pHs, drought, Assets pruning, salt spray, and some soil compaction -lustrous dark green foliage -propagated by rooted cuttings or -arching branches -Rose Family, with the primary pest problem being -red cranberry-like fruits (hence the common name) that are spider mites that cause cosmetic damage, and dense and persistent into early winter occasionally fireblight disease to the young stems -salt spray tolerant -mulch to prevent weeds from arising through the Liabilities center of the shrub, due to the small foliage that allows -garbage and dead leaf collector because of low, arching, light penetration to the ground many-stemmed profile -abundantly available in containers -slow growth Foliage -spider mites are a frequent foliage cosmetic problem, -dark glossy green especially when the plant is under heat and drought stress in -alternate and small, to 0.5" long summer -broadly elliptical Habitat to rhombic, with -Zones 5 to 7 an acute tip and an -Native to Western China undulating leaf margin SELECTIONS -spider mite Alternates cosmetic leaf -other low-profile groundcover , especially those with damage, especially arching stems, attractive foliage, and/or showy fruits during hot and dry (Arctostaphylos uva-ursi, Erica, Juniperus conferta, summers, is Juniperus horizontalis, , Mitchella common in this repens, etc.) – Variants – Related species -autumn color is a - 'Little Gem' (also known as mixture of green, Cotoneaster apiculatus 'Tom Thumb'), with its species or yellow, orange, hybrid parentage sometimes placed under Cotoneaster red, and wine, adpressus or ) - a truly compact slowly absicing form, with miniature crinkled leaves and very thin stems that radiate from the center of the shrub, to 1' tall x 2' wide, with Flowers very slow growth and essentially no flowers nor fruits; -pink buds opening to white-pink flowers tightly attractive as a dwarf specimen shrub, but very prone to pressed to the stems, in late May and early June webworm -many very small clustered flowers -pendulous, arching, or weeping woody are -effective as a whole plant in flower, especially up- sometimes grafted onto vertical stems of the same close, but not overwhelming , for a more dramatic impact, and Cranberry Cotoneaster is an example of this practice, sometimes sold on 1.5-5' "standards"