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Flower of Japanese spiraea in Japan Spiraea japonica 'Goldflame' - foliage. Spiraea japonica is a deciduous, perennial shrub native to Japan, China, and Korea. Southwest China is the center for biodiversity of the species. [4] It is naturalized throughout much of the Northeast, Southeast, and Midwest areas of the United States, and parts of ...
(MHNT) Spiraea japonica - Foliage - Les Martels, Giroussens Tarn; Camera manufacturer: NIKON CORPORATION: Camera model: NIKON D850: Author: Didier Descouens: Exposure time: 1/800 sec (0.00125) F-number: f/14: ISO speed rating: 400: Date and time of data generation: 14:20, 16 April 2023: Lens focal length: 70 mm: Short title
Spiraea plants are hardy, deciduous-leaved shrubs. The leaves are simple and usually short stalked, and are arranged in a spiralling, alternate fashion. In most species, the leaves are lanceolate (narrowly oval) and about 2.5 to 10 centimetres (0.98 to 3.94 in) long.
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Spiraea japonica var. alpina, also known as the alpine spirea or daphne spirea, is a low-growing, rounded, deciduous shrub that has pink flowers in flat-topped clusters in late spring to mid summer. The leaves are small, oval, sharply toothed, and blue green-colored.
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Spiraea nipponica is a species of flowering plant in the family Rosaceae, native to the island of Shikoku, Japan. [1] Growing to 1.2–2.5 m (4–8 ft) tall and broad, it is a deciduous shrub with clusters of small, bowl-shaped white flowers in midsummer. [2] The specific epithet nipponica means "Japanese". [3]
Spiraeoideae as defined before 2007 is paraphyletic, [1] leading some authors to define a broader subfamily which includes the Spiraeoideae as well as the Maleae (plants such as pears and apples whose fruits are pomes), and the Amygdaloideae (including almonds and plums, whose fruits are drupes).