Warm Season Annuals

Warm Season Annuals

Warm Season Annuals Assigned Readings Plant List 9 HORT 308/609 Spring 2020 for Plant List 9 Read the pages in your textbook associated with the family descriptions and individual taxa covered on Plant List 9 that was distributed in lab. These plant lists are also available on the course website. http://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/syllabi/308/home/frameset.htm All Text & Images Are Copyrighted As Indicated or By: Dr. Michael A. Arnold Texas A&M University Dept. Horticultural Sciences College Station, TX 77843-2133 Warm Season Annuals Warm Season Annuals – Adapted to the peak of summer’s heat –Be bold – Many languish or stunt in cool weather • Emotional / time commitment is short term – Not necessarily drought or sun tolerant • Limited expense – Some tropical perennials or woody • Opportunity for change / something new plants are used as summer annuals in –Watch for short life cycles & cooler regions invasive potentials • Definition of annuals is regionally dependent • Old-fashioned practice enjoying a resurgence of –Great potential to augment popularity pollinator support Timing sowing / transplant for fall displays Caution can easily be confused Capsicum annuum with poisonous relatives Ornamental Pepper • Native S. Texas woody subshrub used as an annual in cooler climates • Source of most commercial edible pepper cultivars • Tolerates sun or partial shade, more fruit in sun •Tolerant of variable soil pH C. annuum var. glabriusculum • Heat, but not particularly Capsicum annuum Capsicum annuum drought tolerant Ornamental Pepper • Fruit are primary asset, Ornamental Pepper variegated foliage on some cultivars • Sap from fruit and foliage can be an irritant • Major economic crop • Great for design element for edible landscapes C. annuum var. glabriusculum Caladium bicolor Summer Annuals For Caladium • Tropical perennial Showy Foliage used as summer annual • Valued for large variegated heart- shaped leaves – Smaller version of elephant ear with variegation – Green, red, pink, white leaves, flower insignificant • Upright 1’ - 2’ leaf stalks from tuber Caladium bicolor Caladium • Needs rich moist organic soil, fertility, and shade Harmonious color • Fade and / or foliar combinations, burn in sun; slugs nice blending of can be a problem textural contrasts, • Shade massing & and interesting borders, tropical use of forms groundcover, patio pots / containers, interiorscaping (high light only) • Buy established plants, very slow to grow from tubers Solenostemon scutellarioides Solenostemon scutellarioides (Coleus × hybridus) Coleus Coleus • Tropical USDA z. 10-13 perennial treated as a summer annual • Excellent shade color plants, 1’- 3’ • Grown for variegated foliage • Flowers are usually a detraction – Green, red, yellow, pink, bronze, white, • Majority of cultivars in shade, a ruffled, multi-tone few for sun in Texas – Ex. ‘Burgundy Sun’ & ‘Plum Parfait’ • Heat but not drought tolerant, some insect problems • Massing, containers, baskets, interiorscapes Senecio cineraria Senecio cineraria Dusty Miller • Perennial, USDA z.9 (8) - Dusty Miller 13, subshrub grown as a spring / transition / cool • Survives drought, but best in moist well drained soil or warm season annual • Root rots in wet soil and high humidity, scraggly in • Grown for silver-gray to summer of second year, shrub-like in USDA z. 9-13 silver-white foliage • Subshrub to 3’ tall, mostly 6” to 12” rosette • Blooms signal end of useful life as an annual Begonia semperflorens-cultorum Summer Annuals For Waxleaf Begonia • USDA z. 9b-13 perennial Bedding/Massing in Shade used as summer annual • Mostly squat 6” to 12” tight mounds of foliage – Foliage thick & waxy, glossy, green to bronze-red – White, pink, or red single or double flowers – Flowers tend to be partly hidden by foliage Begonia semperflorens-cultorum Begonia spp. Other Begonias Waxleaf Begonia • Full sun to medium shade, cultivar dependent • Reduce soil splashing to avoid bacterial rots; do not shear • Bedding, edging, hanging baskets, containers, interiorscaping Mostly useful in interiorscapes or shaded containers/hanging baskets Impatiens wallerana Impatiens Impatiens wallerana • Melt in Texas sun, sun acceptable in north Impatiens • Require constant moist but well drained soils • Can be used as indicator plants for drought Naturalized • Tropical USDA zone 10-13 in Hawaii perennial treated as summer annual • Recent problems with viruses • Good annuals for summer flower color in shaded locations, mounding 6” to 2’ tall plants; colorful pillow of singles/doubles Impatiens × ‘New Guinea Hybrids’ New Guinea Hybrid Impatiens Summer Annuals For • Good substitutes for I. wallerana in regions Bedding/Massing in Sun with milder summers • Usually poor performer in Texas summer • Darker glossier leaf & variegated forms • Wider flower color range than I. wallerana Catharanthus roseus Catharanthus roseus Vinca or Periwinkle Vinca or Periwinkle • Best in moist well drained organic matter soils, full sun to • Subtropical used part shade, DO NOT PLANT as summer annual EARLY (after June 1) • Aerial Phytophthora is a major • 1’ to 2’ mound of limitation; can be weedy dark glossy • Bedding, massing, annual green foliage groundcover, patio containers, window boxes, hanging baskets • Season long 1” diameter white, pink, lavender, purple flowers Aerial Phytophthora on Evolvulus glomeratus subsp. grandiflorus Catharanthus roseus Blue Daze Courtesy of Dr. Larry Barnes, formerly • Tropical used as summer annual Texas A&M AgriLife Extension • Flat mound, 2’ - 3’ wide x 4”- 8”tall • Frosted green - blue-green foliage • Sky blue to purple-blue 1” flowers Before inoculation – Spring to frost, profuse in summer heat, reduced in shade • Very heat tolerant, moderate salt, & high pH tolerance, but not overly drought tolerant • Survives full sun, but best with light afternoon shade • Edging, bedding, tropical or summer groundcover, containers, hanging baskets After inoculation After inoculation • Plant on close spacings for full effect; • Clump-forming evergreen perennial Gazania rigens Gazania rigens full sun to partial shade in nearly any [USDA z.9 (8b) - 13] or season-long well drained soil annual in cooler zones Gazania Gazania • Heat, drought, sun, and wind tolerant • Dark lustrous green leaves above, silver beneath or allover, basal rosette with • Edging, bedding, containers, high light flower stalks above foliage to 6” to 8” tall conservatories; rock gardens; xeriscapes • Striking nearly iridescent 2” to 3” diameter composite heads • Gazania rigens var. uniflora, Trailing – Rays pinwheel-like; single, bi-, or tri-colored Gazania, is vine-like groundcover form with silver foliage & yellow flowers; – Wide color range; nearly year-round bloom less cold hardy; USDA z. 9a (9b) - 13 Gazania rigens var. uniflora Gazania rigens var. rigens Gazania rigens var. uniflora Do We Really Want A Focal Point Here? Helenium amarum Bitterweed • Native wildflower to Eastern & Central U.S., including Texas • Light airy filamentous foliage with small yellow daisies from ‘Dakota Gold’ spring to fall • Form variable; wild types more upright and open at base, especially in competition – ‘Dakota Gold’ is a short spreader developed from TAMU genotypes Helenium amarum Bitterweed • Tolerates heat, drought, wind, some salt ‘Dakota Gold’ exposure, and poor Gomphrena globosa fertility soils Globe Amaranth • Can be sheared or mown; • Summer annual low maintenance bedding and naturalizing – 1’ to 2’ (3’) tall rounded to sprawling mound • Needs a well drained soil, • Globe shaped flower but clay is acceptable Agromyzid fly damage elongating to tubular • Root and crown rots in – White, purple, or pink wet soils – Very long bloom time, good • Agromyzid flies bore into cut or dried flower Image courtesy of – Peak in late summer heat stems in late summer Dr. James A. Reinert Gomphrena Gomphrena haageana globosa Red Gomphrena Globe Amaranth • Very similar to G. globosa, but lankier, sprawling & open in habit • Sun, pH adaptable, heat & drought tolerant • Flowers red to orange, elongating cone-shape • Bedding, massing, containers, lankier • Similar tough mid- to late-season bloom cultivars sprawling over wall or in baskets Gomphrena ‘Fireworks’ Pentas lanceolata Pentas Fireworks Amaranth • Evergreen subtropical / tropical shrub (USDA zones 9b-13) most often used as a summer annual • Variable in habit; older cultivars upright and leggy to 3’ or more; newer dwarf cultivars compact & 8”-18” • Dark green leaves contrast with terminal corymbs of star-shaped flowers • Bright lip-stick red, pink, lilac, Too well adapted? or white Rose Moss or Moss Rose Portulaca grandiflora • Reseeding summer annual, 6” - 10” tall • Succulent-like foliage, adds xeric flavor • Rainbow of solid, bicolors, single, & double flowers, most close in afternoon Pentas lanceolata • One of our best summer annuals; any well drained soil, tolerant of salt, heat, Pentas drought, high pH soils, full sun • Aphids, white flies, • Bedding, rock gardens, containers, spider mites, root rots edging, hanging baskets, seasonal groundcover • Cultivar performance is highly variable even within a series • Good fertile well drained soil and mostly sunny site; bit temperamental Portulaca oleracea Zinnia angustifolia Purslane Mexican Zinnia • Similar usage and growth • Single orange to white daisy- requirements to Portulaca like flowers, 8”- 12” tall grandiflora, but less refined • Very heat and mildly drought • Flowers can be more striking than P. tolerant, better if grown in grandiflora, but tends to be weedier less humid

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    14 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us