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Viburnum tinus is widely cultivated for its winter blooms and metallic blue berries. It is hardy down to −10 °C (14 °F). It is hardy down to −10 °C (14 °F). The cultivars 'Eve Price', [ 6 ] 'French White' [ 7 ] and 'Gwenllian' [ 8 ] have gained the Royal Horticultural Society 's Award of Garden Merit .
move to sidebar hide. ... Viburnum tinus; To scientific name of a plant: This is a redirect from a vernacular ("common") name to the scientific name of a plant ...
Viburnum setigerum has upright, coarse structure and orange to reddish-orange fruit. Viburnum sieboldii has coarse, open structure, flat-topped flowers, reddish-black fruit, and can grow as a small tree. Viburnum tinus is a widely grown garden and landscape shrub.
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Mined Viburnum lantana leaf Larva. The wingspan is about 9 mm. There are two generations per year with adults on wing in May and again in August. [2] The larvae feed on the wayfaring tree (Viburnum lantana), guelder rose (Viburnum opulus), laurestine (Viburnum tinus) and rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), mining the leaves of their host plant. [3]
The Latin specific epithet of tinifolius with leaves like Laurustinus (Viburnum tinus). [3] Both the genus and the species were first described and published in Acta Bot. Acad. Sci. Hung. Vol.26 on page 282 (1980, published in 1981). [1]
Viburnum tinus L. Catalogus Plantarum Jacob van Huysum (1688 – 1740) was an 18th-century botanical painter from the Dutch Republic who moved to the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1721.
Among the woody species also found in these forests are the hawthorn, barberry, butcher's broom (Ruscus aculeatus), Viburnum tinus, ivy, and Daphne laureola. It forms dense and dark forests in very distinct enclaves, in areas with high rainfall (from 2,000 to 3,000 mm, due to the sudden cooling, with elevation, of humid winds), at elevations of ...