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It grows in many habitat types and plant communities, including pinyon-juniper woodland, creosote bush scrub, sagebrush scrub, chaparral, and coastal sage scrub. [3] This plant is a shrub growing up to about 2.7 metres (8 ft 10 in) in maximum height. It grows from a large fibrous root system which can extend over 9 metres (30 ft) from the base ...
Mitchella repens is cultivated for its ornamental red berries and shiny, bright green foliage. [16] It is grown as a creeping ground cover in shady locations. It is rarely propagated for garden use by way of seeds but cuttings are easy. [17]
Rhus trilobata is a shrub in the sumac genus with the common names skunkbush sumac, [1] sourberry, skunkbush, [2] and three-leaf sumac.It is native to the western half of Canada and the Western United States, from the Great Plains to California and south through Arizona extending into northern Mexico.
burning bush Celastraceae (spindle family) Euonymus europaeus: European spindle Celastraceae (spindle family) Euonymus fortunei: Fortune's spindle; winter creeper euonymus Celastraceae (spindle family) Euonymus japonicus: Japanese spindle Celastraceae (spindle family) Euonymus occidentalis: western spindle Celastraceae (spindle family) Gyminda ...
It is a deciduous, dicot shrub growing 0.5–3.5 m (1.5–11.5 ft) tall. The leaves are opposite, elliptic in shape, 6–10 cm (2.4–3.9 in) long, unlobed or shallowly 3-lobed, jaggedly serrated, and turning red in autumn; their underside glabrous, especially along the veins.
Common names include strawberry bush, American strawberry bush, bursting-heart, hearts-a-bustin, and hearts-bustin'-with-love. [2] It is native to the eastern United States, its distribution extending as far west as Texas. [3] It has also been recorded in Ontario. [4] This is a deciduous shrub growing up to 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) tall. The ...
Dodonaea, commonly known as hop-bushes, [2] [3] is a genus of about 70 species of flowering plants in the soapberry family, Sapindaceae.The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution in tropical, subtropical and warm temperate regions of Africa, the Americas, southern Asia and Australasia, but 59 species are endemic to Australia.
Russelia equisetiformis is a multi-branching plant with thin leaves and arching foliage that measure around 4–5 feet (1.2–1.5 m). [2] The overall graceful form of the subshrub is a fountainesque mound.