Shrub Section

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

Proven Winners®® ColorChoice Demand for our line of exceptional flowering shrubs has been phenomenal since we launched the program in 2004. Gardeners searching for colorful, easy-to-grow plants and a brand they can trust look to Proven Winners ColorChoice Shrubs for performance, quality, and innovation – and we deliver. Our stunning varieties grow like annuals and perennials and add color, height, and structure to containers, beds, and landscapes. Growers and retailers also appreciate how easy these shrubs are to grow and to sell. The plants in this section include traditional consumer favorites as well as exciting, new introductions, which are sure to make an impression on consumers and an impact on growers’ and retailers’ bottom line. To meet the demand for these high-margin woody ornamentals, liners of selected varieties are available from four Proven Winners propagators – EuroAmerican, Four Star, Pleasant View, and Spring Meadow. Grow more of the plants that consumers want. Choose versatile ColorChoice Flowering Shrubs and be ready for a season of success. Above: CITYLINE ® Vienna Hydrangea macrophylla, LET’S DANCE ® Starlight Hydrangea macrophylla, QUICK FIRE ® Hydrangea paniculata with ANGELFACE ® White Angelonia angustifolia hybrid and SPIRIT ® Appleblossom Cleome hybrid BLOOMERANG ® Purple Syringa x ‘Penda’ 132 133 Abelia x chinensis ‘Keiser’ USPPAF CanPBRAF Buddleia x ‘Blue Chip’ USPP19991 CBRAF RUBY ANNIVERSARY ™ 4-6' Zones 5-9 LO & BEHOLD ® 24-30" Zones 5-9 This beauty gives you more color as the dark, glossy foliage has ruby-red The first miniature Butterfly Bush, Blue Chip is long blooming, frost tolerant, new growth and fall color. Long blooming with clusters of salmon pink and needs no pruning or deadheading. Its fragrant flowers attract butterflies buds, white flowers, and soft pink bracts from mid-summer until frost. and hummingbirds. This beauty is an ideal choice for smaller landscapes The fragrant flowers are a butterfly magnet. New this year. and container gardens. Uses: Containers, groundcover, landscaping, beds, borders Uses: Containers, landscapes, beds, butterfly gardens Growth Rate: Medium Growth Rate: Fast USPPAF CBRAF Abelia x grandiflora ‘Rika1’ USPPAF Buddleia x ‘Miss Ruby’ 4-5' Zones 5-9 ™ 3-4' Zones 6-9 Miss Ruby NEW BRONZE ANNIVERSARY The foliage of this Abelia emerges a unique bronze-copper color and A sweetheart of a plant with remarkably vivid, fuchsia blooms, a compact then matures to an attractive lime-green as the season progresses. White habit, and soft silver-grey foliage. Miss Ruby's color is unlike any other bell-shaped blooms emerge in spring and intermittently throughout the Buddleia on the market. ™ ‘Keiser’ USPPAF CanPBRAF BRONZE ANNIVERSARY ™ Abelia x grandiflora ‘Rika1’ USPPAF GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY ™ Abelia x grandiflora ‘Minipan’ SILVER ANNIVERSARY ™ Abelia x grandiflor a ‘Panache’ RUBY ANNIVERSARY Abelia x chinensis summer. A very strong bloomer and a great groundcover. Uses: Containers, landscapes, beds, butterfly gardens Growth Rate: Fast Uses: Containers, groundcover, landscaping, beds, borders Growth Rate: Medium English Butterfly Series 4-5' Zones 5-9 Abelia x grandiflora ‘Minipan’ There are Butterfly Bushes and then there are these three fantastic ™ 24-28" Zones 6-9 dwarf Buddleia bred by the U.K.’s Elizabeth Keep. The upright, GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY mounded plants are covered with brilliantly colored, extra-large flower The bright golden variegated leaves make Golden Anniversary something panicles that are irresistible to butterflies, bees, and other flying to celebrate. This sturdy, compact grower is a multi-stemmed dense pollinators. Always top sellers. shrub with arching branches. Its fragrant white flowers bloom from Uses: Containers, landscapes, beds, butterfly gardens May through summer. Growth Rate: Fast Uses: Containers, groundcover, landscaping, beds, borders ‘Adokeep’ Can2636 Growth Rate: Medium Buddleia davidii ADONIS BLUE ™ P. Allen Smith ‘Panache’ Abelia x grandiflora ‘Peakeep’ Can2637 Platinum Collection Buddleia davidii ™ 24-28" Zones 6-9 SILVER ANNIVERSARY PEACOCK ™ Easy-to-grow Silver Anniversary is a vigorous, low-growing, SUNJOY ® Gold Beret Berberis thunbergii ‘Talago’ USPPAF SUNJOY ® Gold Pillar Berberis thunbergii ‘Maria’ USPP18082 LO & BEHOLD ® x ‘Blue Chip’ Buddleia USPP19991 CBRAF Miss Ruby Buddleia ‘Pyrkeep’ Can2638 mounded beauty that features variegated foliage with distinct, creamy Buddleia davidii silver margins and white flowers. The stems and leaves have touches of PURPLE EMPEROR ™ pink and red throughout, giving the plants a rosy glow that really lights up a small bed or large container. Buxus sempervirens ‘Katerberg’ USPP15998 Can2365 Uses: Containers, groundcover, landscaping, beds, borders NORTH STAR ™ 2-3' Zones 5-8 Growth Rate: Medium Glossy, dark green foliage and a dense, spherical form that rarely requires pruning are what makes North Star shine. It has superior winter Berberis thunbergi i ‘Talago’ USPPAF color, too. This versatile, hardy boxwood brings year-round interest to ® 6-12" Zones 4-8 SUNJOY Gold Beret any outdoor space. A unique dwarf Barberry that is low-mounding and boasts golden foliage Uses: Containers, beds, foundation plantings, low hedges in the summer turning to red in the fall. Sunjoy is stunning as in-ground Growth Rate: Slow mass plantings and is burn resistant. Uses: Containers, landscaping, borders (not recommended for greenhouse production) Growth Rate: Slow AWARD WINNERS ADONIS BLUE ™ Buddleia ADONIS BLUE ™ Buddleia davidii ‘Adokeep’ Can2636 PEACOCK ™ Buddleia davidii ‘Peakeep’ Can2637 PURPLE EMPEROR ™ Buddleia davidii ‘Adokeep’ Can2638 NORTH STAR ™ Buxus sempervirens ‘Katerberg’ USPP15998 Can2365 Berberis thunbergi i ‘Maria’ USPP18082 Silver Medal - Royal Boskoop Horticultural Society SUNJOY ® Gold Pillar 3-4' Zones 4-8 LO & BEHOLD ® Buddleia For great garden architecture and brilliant color, Gold Pillar is a standout. Top Buddleia - Royal Horticulture Its bright golden foliage turns orange and red in the fall, and its narrow Society at Wisley Gardens shape resembles ‘Helmond Pillar.’ A burn-resistant variety, Gold Pillar is Gold Medal - Plantarium 2009 excellent in containers or for entrance gardens. SUNJOY ® Gold Pillar Berberis Uses: Containers, landscaping, borders Bronze Medal - Plantarium Growth Rate: Slow 134 135 Caryopteris clandonensis ‘Janice’ USPPAF CanPBRAF Cornus stolonifera ‘Farrow’ USPP18523 LIL’ MISS SUNSHINE ™ 30-36" Zones 5-9 ARCTIC FIRE ™ 3-4' Zones 3-8 A cross between Petit Bleu ™ and Sunshine Blue ® that delivers shiny Compact and heavily branched, Arctic Fire produces clouds of white yellow foliage and a neat compact habit. This beauty produces an flowers in May. In winter, the bare red stems bring brilliant color to the abundance of blue flowers in later summer. New this year. landscape. Good for cut stems. Uses: Small containers, groundcover, landscapes, beds, borders Uses: Beds, landscapes, winter gardens Growth Rate: Fast Growth Rate: Medium Caryopteris x clandonensis ‘Minibleu’ USPP14674 Can2317 Cornus sanguinea ‘Cato’ USPP19892 CBRAF PETIT BLEU ™ 24-30" Zones 5-9 ARCTIC SUN ™ 3-4' Zones 4-7 NEW Tightly compact, vigorous plants are covered by exquisite, deep blue A brightly colored compact Dogwood with rich yellow stems tipped flowers from summer to fall. in blood red. Arctic Sun is brighter than other compact varieties and Uses: Small containers, groundcover, landscapes, beds, borders adds a bold splash of color in the winter landscape. This hardy, Growth Rate: Fast adaptable plant will tolerate damp soils. Good for cut stems. LIL’ MISS SUNSHINE ™ PETIT BLEU ™ SUNSHINE BLUE ® SOFT SERVE ® ‘Minibleu’ USPP14674 Can2317 ‘Jason’ USPPAF Can2316 Uses: Beds, landscapes, winter gardens Caryopteris clandonensis ‘Janice’ USPPAF CanPBRAF Caryopteris x clandonensis Caryopteris incana Chamaecyparis pisifera ‘Dow Whiting’ USPPAF Can3636 Caryopteris incana ‘Jason’ USPPAF Can2316 Growth Rate: Medium SUNSHINE BLUE ® 3' Zones 5-9 Deutzia gracilis ‘Duncan’ USPP16098 Can2640 As different from earlier, anemic-looking yellow leaf forms as it gets, ® 20-36" Zones 5-8 plantsman Peter Champion has outdone himself with this one. Sunshine CHARDONNAY PEARLS Blue is vigorous, bushy, well-branched, and has incredible, azure blue A dense, rounded shrub with arching branches, versatile, easy Chardonnay flowers and brilliant gold foliage. Pearls has chartreuse foliage and dainty white, fragrant flowers. Uses: Containers, beds, landscapes, butterfly gardens Uses: Containers, mixed plantings, landscapes, beds Growth Rate: Fast Growth Rate: Medium Chamaecyparis pisifera ‘Dow Whiting’ USPPAF Can3636 Euonymus alatu s ‘Select’ SOFT SERVE ® 6-10' Zones 5-8 FIRE BALL ® 5-7' Zones 4-9 NEW Soft Serve is a compact, conical False Cypress with graceful, soft, Here’s a hot Burning Bush with excellent branching, hardy stems, fern-like branching. Its leaves are bright green on top and flecked with and superior winter hardiness. In fall, the emerald green foliage silver-blue on the bottom. An excellent substitute for Dwarf Alberta turns to molten red. Spruce or other larger conifers. Uses: Landscapes, beds, hedges, foundation plantings SUGARTINA ™ ‘Crystalina’ VANILLA SPICE ® Clethra alnifolia ’Caleb’ USPPAF CanPBRAF ARCTIC FIRE ™ ARCTIC SUN ™ ‘Farrow’ USPPAF Growth Rate: Slow Clethra alnifolia ‘Crystalina’ USPPAF CanPBRAF Cornus stolonifera Cornus sanguinea ‘Cato’ USPP19892 CanPBRAF Uses: Containers, landscapes, borders Growth Rate: Medium Euonymus fortunei ‘Interbolwi’ USPP10424 Clethra alnifolia ‘Crystalina’ USPPAF CanPBRAF
Recommended publications
  • Native Plant Catalog

    Native Plant Catalog

    native plant catalog HERBACEOUS PLANTS Page 1 Botanical Name Common Name Color Bloom Light Soil Height Agastache 'Black Adder' Hyssop Violet-Blue June-Sept Full Sun M-D 2-3' Fragrant flowers attract bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds; Compact and good for containers; Deer resistant. Allium cernuum Nodding Onion Lt Pink May-June Sun-Pt Shade D 12-18” Attracts bees and butterflies; perfect for rocky soils; tolerates drought once established. Amsonia 'Blue Ice' Blue Star Dark Blue Apr-May Sun-Pt Shade M 12-15" Attracts hummingbirds, bees, and butterflies; foliage turns golden yellow in fall, adding stunning color to the garden. Amsonia tab. var. salicifolia Eastern Bluestar Lt Blue Apr-May Sun-Pt Shade M 2-3’ Attracts bees and butterflies; tolerates clay soil and drought; attractive yellow fall color. Stake in moist soils. Aquilegia canadensis Wild Columbine Red and Yellow Apr-May Part Shade M-D 1-3' Attracts hummingbirds and butterflies; self sows in woodland garden. Tolerates dry soil and deer. Arisaema triphyllum Jack-in-the-Pulpit Green/Maroon Apr-June Shade M 1-2' Bright red berry cluster in fall provides food for birds, mammals, and turtles. A true specimen plant for the woodland garden. Asarum canadense Wild Ginger Maroon May-June Shade M 6" Alternate larval host plant for pipevine swallowtail butterfly; a wonderful slow-spreading groundcover for deep shade. Asclepias incarnata Swamp Milkweed Rose-Pink July-Sept Full Sun M-W 3-5’ Larval host for monarch butterfly; attracts bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds; a good choice for rain gardens; tolerates clay soils. Asclepias syriaca Common Milkweed Pale Pink July-Sept Full Sun M-D 2-4' Larval host for monarch butterfly; attracts bees, butterflies and hummingbirds; tolerates clay soils.
  • Morton Virginia Sweetspire – Scarlet Beauty™ Itea Virginica ‘Morton’

    Morton Virginia Sweetspire – Scarlet Beauty™ Itea Virginica ‘Morton’

    CHICAGOLAND GROWS®, INC. Plant Introduction Program - Plant Release Bulletin #28 Morton Virginia Sweetspire – Scarlet Beauty™ Itea virginica ‘Morton’ The Morton Virginia sweetspire is a summer-flowering shrub with excellent fall color. This selection has superior hardiness and a higher soil pH tolerance than other cultivars of the species. An easy-to-grow native shrub selected from the collections at The Morton Arboretum. Chicagoland Grows® is a nonprofit corporation of the Chicago Botanic Garden, The Morton Arboretum, and the Ornamental Growers Association of Northern Illinois (OGA). Morton Virginia Sweetspire – Scarlet Beauty™ Itea virginica ‘Morton’ Botanical Name Ornamental Characteristics Itea virginica ‘Morton’ The white flowers are densely borne on numerous pendant 3-inch-long inflorescences that are produced from mid-June Common Name to early July, when few other shrubs are in bloom. The flowers Morton Virginia Sweetspire have a faint but pleasing fragrance and are attractive to butterflies. Medium-green foliage all summer changes to deep Family orange-red to red-purple in autumn, peaking in early November Iteaceae and persisting through a very hard frost. In milder climates, the colorful foliage can persist much of the winter. The stems can Origin also turn a pleasing red color during winter months. Selected in 1999 by Kris Bachtell of The Morton Arboretum, Lisle, Illinois, from a plant that has been in the Arboretum’s Culture collection since the late 1950s. The species is native throughout Best grown on moist to wet soils with ample organic matter. the southeastern United States, from coastal Florida north to As with most selections of Virginia sweetspire, ‘Morton’ prefers New Jersey and from eastern Texas north into southern Illinois.
  • Vegetation Community Monitoring at Ocmulgee National Monument, 2011

    Vegetation Community Monitoring at Ocmulgee National Monument, 2011

    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Vegetation Community Monitoring at Ocmulgee National Monument, 2011 Natural Resource Data Series NPS/SECN/NRDS—2014/702 ON THE COVER Duck potato (Sagittaria latifolia) at Ocmulgee National Monument. Photograph by: Sarah C. Heath, SECN Botanist. Vegetation Community Monitoring at Ocmulgee National Monument, 2011 Natural Resource Data Series NPS/SECN/NRDS—2014/702 Sarah Corbett Heath1 Michael W. Byrne2 1USDI National Park Service Southeast Coast Inventory and Monitoring Network Cumberland Island National Seashore 101 Wheeler Street Saint Marys, Georgia 31558 2USDI National Park Service Southeast Coast Inventory and Monitoring Network 135 Phoenix Road Athens, Georgia 30605 September 2014 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science office in Fort Collins, Colorado, publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics. These reports are of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Data Series is intended for the timely release of basic data sets and data summaries. Care has been taken to assure accuracy of raw data values, but a thorough analysis and interpretation of the data has not been completed. Consequently, the initial analyses of data in this report are provisional and subject to change. All manuscripts in the series receive the appropriate level of peer review to ensure that the information is scientifically credible, technically accurate, appropriately written for the intended audience, and designed and published in a professional manner.
  • Woody Shrubs for Stormwater Retention Practices 1 TABLE of CONTENTS

    Woody Shrubs for Stormwater Retention Practices 1 TABLE of CONTENTS

    Woody Shrubs for Stormwater Retention Practices School of Integrative Plant Science, Northeast and Mid-Atlantic Regions Horticulture Section Second Edition Ethan M. Dropkin, Nina Bassuk and Trevan Signorelli Woody Shrubs for Stormwater Retention Practices 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS What is Stormwater? ................................................................................... 3 Stormwater Issues ....................................................................................... 4 Combined Sewer Overflow......................................................................... 5 Municipal, State and Federal Stormwater Regulations ............................ 6 Stormwater Infiltration Practices ............................................................... 6 Why Use Plants? .......................................................................................... 7 What Plants are Best? ................................................................................. 8 Site Assessment .......................................................................................... 9 Site Assessment Checklist ......................................................................... 12 Design Consideration Prior to Plant Selection ......................................... 13 Establishment .............................................................................................. 14 Maintenance ................................................................................................. 15 Plant Selection ............................................................................................
  • Native Plants for Wildlife Habitat and Conservation Landscaping Chesapeake Bay Watershed Acknowledgments

    Native Plants for Wildlife Habitat and Conservation Landscaping Chesapeake Bay Watershed Acknowledgments

    U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Native Plants for Wildlife Habitat and Conservation Landscaping Chesapeake Bay Watershed Acknowledgments Contributors: Printing was made possible through the generous funding from Adkins Arboretum; Baltimore County Department of Environmental Protection and Resource Management; Chesapeake Bay Trust; Irvine Natural Science Center; Maryland Native Plant Society; National Fish and Wildlife Foundation; The Nature Conservancy, Maryland-DC Chapter; U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service, Cape May Plant Materials Center; and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Chesapeake Bay Field Office. Reviewers: species included in this guide were reviewed by the following authorities regarding native range, appropriateness for use in individual states, and availability in the nursery trade: Rodney Bartgis, The Nature Conservancy, West Virginia. Ashton Berdine, The Nature Conservancy, West Virginia. Chris Firestone, Bureau of Forestry, Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Chris Frye, State Botanist, Wildlife and Heritage Service, Maryland Department of Natural Resources. Mike Hollins, Sylva Native Nursery & Seed Co. William A. McAvoy, Delaware Natural Heritage Program, Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control. Mary Pat Rowan, Landscape Architect, Maryland Native Plant Society. Rod Simmons, Maryland Native Plant Society. Alison Sterling, Wildlife Resources Section, West Virginia Department of Natural Resources. Troy Weldy, Associate Botanist, New York Natural Heritage Program, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. Graphic Design and Layout: Laurie Hewitt, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Chesapeake Bay Field Office. Special thanks to: Volunteer Carole Jelich; Christopher F. Miller, Regional Plant Materials Specialist, Natural Resource Conservation Service; and R. Harrison Weigand, Maryland Department of Natural Resources, Maryland Wildlife and Heritage Division for assistance throughout this project.
  • Chapter Four: Landscaping with Native Plants a Gardener’S Guide for Missouri Landscaping with Native Plants a Gardener’S Guide for Missouri

    Chapter Four: Landscaping with Native Plants a Gardener’S Guide for Missouri Landscaping with Native Plants a Gardener’S Guide for Missouri

    Chapter Four: Landscaping with Native Plants A Gardener’s Guide for Missouri Landscaping with Native Plants A Gardener’s Guide for Missouri Introduction Gardening with native plants is becoming the norm rather than the exception in Missouri. The benefits of native landscaping are fueling a gardening movement that says “no” to pesticides and fertilizers and “yes” to biodiversity and creating more sustainable landscapes. Novice and professional gardeners are turning to native landscaping to reduce mainte- nance and promote plant and wildlife conservation. This manual will show you how to use native plants to cre- ate and maintain diverse and beauti- ful spaces. It describes new ways to garden lightly on the earth. Chapter Four: Landscaping with Native Plants provides tools garden- ers need to create and maintain suc- cessful native plant gardens. The information included here provides practical tips and details to ensure successful low-maintenance land- scapes. The previous three chap- ters include Reconstructing Tallgrass Prairies, Rain Gardening, and Native landscapes in the Whitmire Wildflower Garden, Shaw Nature Reserve. Control and Identification of Invasive Species. use of native plants in residential gar- den design, farming, parks, roadsides, and prairie restoration. Miller called his History of Native work “The Prairie Spirit in Landscape Landscaping Design”. One of the earliest practitioners of An early proponent of native landscap- Miller’s ideas was Ossian C. Simonds, ing was Wilhelm Miller who was a landscape architect who worked in appointed head of the University of the Chicago region. In a lecture pre- Illinois extension program in 1912. He sented in 1922, Simonds said, “Nature published a number of papers on the Introduction 3 teaches what to plant.
  • Virginia Willow (Itea Virginica)

    Virginia Willow (Itea Virginica)

    Virginia willow (Itea virginica) For definitions of botanical terms, visit en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_botanical_terms. Virginia willow is an erect to spreading shrub with showy spikes of tiny white flowers that bloom in late winter through early summer. It occurs naturally in floodplain swamps, seepage slopes, stream and lake edges, and calcareous and mesic hammocks. The plant provides food and cover for wildlife. The inflorescence is a dense terminal spike-like raceme that droops downward. Individual flowers are star- shaped, with five white to pinkish petals and a five-lobed, cup-shaped calyx. Stamens are creamy white with pale pinkish anthers. Ovary and pistil are Photo by Keith Bradley prominent. The dark green, leathery leaves are elliptic to obovate with finely toothed margins and pointed tips. They are petiolate and alternately arranged. In the fall, leaf color changes to orange, red, burgundy or purple. Branches are slender and arching. Seeds are born in inconspicuous brown capsules. Despite its common name, Virginia willow is not a true willow, which are members of the Salix genus in the Salicaceae family. It is also known as Sweetspire and Tassel-white. Family: Iteaceae (Sweetspire family) Native range: Nearly throughout, less in southernmost counties To see where natural populations of Virginia willow have been vouchered, visit www.florida.plantatlas.usf.edu. Hardiness: Zones 8–10 Lifespan: Perennial Soil: Moist to wet, poor to well-drained, acidic sandy, loamy or clay soils Exposure: Mostly shade, but can sometimes tolerate full sun Growth habit: 6–10’ tall with spread of up to 6’ Propagation: Cuttings, seed Garden tips: Virginia willow is best suited for naturalistic or restoration landscapes and in plantings along retention pond edges, streams and other riparian zones where its suckering habit may assist with soil stabilization.
  • Saxifragaceae Sensu Lato (DNA Sequencing/Evolution/Systematics) DOUGLAS E

    Saxifragaceae Sensu Lato (DNA Sequencing/Evolution/Systematics) DOUGLAS E

    Proc. Nati. Acad. Sci. USA Vol. 87, pp. 4640-4644, June 1990 Evolution rbcL sequence divergence and phylogenetic relationships in Saxifragaceae sensu lato (DNA sequencing/evolution/systematics) DOUGLAS E. SOLTISt, PAMELA S. SOLTISt, MICHAEL T. CLEGGt, AND MARY DURBINt tDepartment of Botany, Washington State University, Pullman, WA 99164; and tDepartment of Botany and Plant Sciences, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521 Communicated by R. W. Allard, March 19, 1990 (received for review January 29, 1990) ABSTRACT Phylogenetic relationships are often poorly quenced and analyses to date indicate that it is reliable for understood at higher taxonomic levels (family and above) phylogenetic analysis at higher taxonomic levels, (ii) rbcL is despite intensive morphological analysis. An excellent example a large gene [>1400 base pairs (bp)] that provides numerous is Saxifragaceae sensu lato, which represents one of the major characters (bp) for phylogenetic studies, and (iii) the rate of phylogenetic problems in angiosperms at higher taxonomic evolution of rbcL is appropriate for addressing questions of levels. As originally defined, the family is a heterogeneous angiosperm phylogeny at the familial level or higher. assemblage of herbaceous and woody taxa comprising 15 We used rbcL sequence data to analyze phylogenetic subfamilies. Although more recent classifications fundamen- relationships in a particularly problematic group-Engler's tally modified this scheme, little agreement exists regarding the (8) broadly defined family Saxifragaceae (Saxifragaceae circumscription, taxonomic rank, or relationships of these sensu lato). Based on morphological analyses, the group is subfamilies. The recurrent discrepancies in taxonomic treat- almost impossible to distinguish or characterize clearly and ments of the Saxifragaceae prompted an investigation of the taxonomic problems at higher power of chloroplast gene sequences to resolve phylogenetic represents one of the greatest relationships within this family and between the Saxifragaceae levels in the angiosperms (9, 10).
  • Vegetation Community Monitoring at Congaree National Park: 2014 Data Summary

    Vegetation Community Monitoring at Congaree National Park: 2014 Data Summary

    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Vegetation Community Monitoring at Congaree National Park 2014 Data Summary Natural Resource Data Series NPS/SECN/NRDS—2016/1016 ON THIS PAGE Tiny, bright yellow blossoms of Hypoxis hirsuta grace the forest floor at Congaree National Park. Photograph courtesy of Sarah C. Heath, Southeast Coast Network. ON THE COVER Spiraling compound leaf of green dragon (Arisaema dracontium) at Congaree National Park. Photograph courtesy of Sarah C. Heath, Southeast Coast Network Vegetation Community Monitoring at Congaree National Park 2014 Data Summary Natural Resource Data Series NPS/SECN/NRDS—2016/1016 Sarah Corbett Heath1 and Michael W. Byrne2 1National Park Service Southeast Coast Inventory and Monitoring Network Cumberland Island National Seashore 101 Wheeler Street Saint Marys, GA 31558 2National Park Service Southeast Coast Inventory and Monitoring Network 135 Phoenix Drive Athens, GA 30605 May 2016 U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service Natural Resource Stewardship and Science Fort Collins, Colorado The National Park Service, Natural Resource Stewardship and Science office in Fort Collins, Colorado, publishes a range of reports that address natural resource topics. These reports are of interest and applicability to a broad audience in the National Park Service and others in natural resource management, including scientists, conservation and environmental constituencies, and the public. The Natural Resource Data Series is intended for the timely release of basic data sets and data summaries. Care has been taken to assure accuracy of raw data values, but a thorough analysis and interpretation of the data has not been completed.
  • Proven Winners Colorchoice Line of Colorful, Easy-To-Grow Shrubs Has Quickly Become a Gardener’S Favorite

    Proven Winners Colorchoice Line of Colorful, Easy-To-Grow Shrubs Has Quickly Become a Gardener’S Favorite

    4 CC Shrub Section_Layout 1 6/1/11 3:26 PM Page 1 Proven Winners ® ColorChoice® INVINCIBELLE® Spirit Hydrangea arborescens The Proven Winners ColorChoice line of colorful, easy-to-grow shrubs has quickly become a gardener’s favorite. Consumers are looking for the value and beauty shrubs provide in the landscape, and they know they can trust Proven Winners to deliver. Our stunning varieties add color, height, and structure to containers, beds, and landscapes. Growers and retailers also appreciate how easy these shrubs are to grow and to sell. The plants in this section include traditional consumer favorites as well as exciting, new introductions, which are sure to make an impression on consumers and an impact on growers’ and retailers’ bottom line. To meet the demand for these high-margin woody ornamentals, liners of selected varieties are available from four Proven Winners propagators – EuroAmerican, Four Star, Pleasant View, and Spring Meadow. Grow more of the plants that consumers want. Choose versatile ColorChoice Flowering Shrubs and be ready for a season of success. 155 4 CC Shrub Section_Layout 1 6/1/11 3:26 PM Page 2 RUBY ANNIVERSARY™ Abelia x chinensis ‘Keiser’ USPPAF CanPBRAF BRONZE ANNIVERSARY™ Abelia x grandiflora ‘Rika1’ USPPAF GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY™ Abelia x grandiflora ‘Minipan’ SILVER ANNIVERSARY™ Abelia x grandiflora ‘Panache’ P. Allen Smith NEW Platinum Collection SUNJOY® Gold Beret Berberis thunbergii ‘Talago’ USPPAF SUNJOY® Gold Pillar Berberis thunbergii ‘Maria’ USPP18082 LO & BEHOLD® x ‘Blue Chip’ Buddleia USPP19991 CBRAF
  • Early Oligocene Itea (Iteaceae) Leaves from East Asia and Their Biogeographic Implications

    Early Oligocene Itea (Iteaceae) Leaves from East Asia and Their Biogeographic Implications

    Plant Diversity 43 (2021) 142e151 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Plant Diversity journal homepage: http://www.keaipublishing.com/en/journals/plant-diversity/ http://journal.kib.ac.cn Review article Early Oligocene Itea (Iteaceae) leaves from East Asia and their biogeographic implications ** * Yi-Min Tian a, Jian Huang b, , Tao Su b, c, Shi-Tao Zhang a, a Kunming University of Science and Technology, Kunming, Yunnan, 650500, China b Key Laboratory of Tropical Forest Ecology, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Mengla, Yunnan, 666303, China c University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100049, China article info abstract Article history: Compressed materials of fossil foliage described here as Itea polyneura sp. nov. (Iteaceae) were collected Received 10 May 2020 from the Oligocene of Wenshan, Yunnan Province, southwestern China. The identification is based on the Received in revised form following characters: eucamptodromous secondary veins, strict scalariform tertiary veins, irregular tooth 8 September 2020 with setaceous apex. The leaf morphology of all modern and fossil species was compared with the new Accepted 10 September 2020 species from Wenshan and show that I. polyneura is most similar to the extant East Asian species Itea Available online 3 October 2020 omeiensis, which inhabits subtropical forests of southern China. This discovery represents the first un- ambiguous leaf fossil record of Itea in East Asia. Together with other species in the Wenshan flora and Keywords: fl fi East Asia evidence from several other ora in southern China, these ndings demonstrate that Itea from East Asia Itea arose with the Paleogene modernization. Iteaceae Copyright © 2020 Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
  • Journal of the Oklahoma Native Plant Society, Volume 9, December 2009

    Journal of the Oklahoma Native Plant Society, Volume 9, December 2009

    4 Oklahoma Native Plant Record Volume 9, December 2009 VASCULAR PLANTS OF SOUTHEASTERN OKLAHOMA FROM THE SANS BOIS TO THE KIAMICHI MOUNTAINS Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy May 1969 Francis Hobart Means, Jr. Midwest City, Oklahoma Current Email Address: [email protected] The author grew up in the prairie region of Kay County where he learned to appreciate proper management of the soil and the native grass flora. After graduation from college, he moved to Eastern Oklahoma State College where he took a position as Instructor in Botany and Agronomy. In the course of conducting botany field trips and working with local residents on their plant problems, the author became increasingly interested in the flora of that area and of the State of Oklahoma. This led to an extensive study of the northern portion of the Oauchita Highlands with collections currently numbering approximately 4,200. The specimens have been processed according to standard herbarium procedures. The first set has been placed in the Herbarium of Oklahoma State University with the second set going to Eastern Oklahoma State College at Wilburton. Editor’s note: The original species list included habitat characteristics and collection notes. These are omitted here but are available in the dissertation housed at the Edmon-Low Library at OSU or in digital form by request to the editor. [SS] PHYSICAL FEATURES Winding Stair Mountain ranges. A second large valley lies across the southern part of Location and Area Latimer and LeFlore counties between the The area studied is located primarily in Winding Stair and Kiamichi mountain the Ouachita Highlands of eastern ranges.