Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Leaves with entire margins, not lightly toothed as typical for Viburnum cassinoides. Viburnum cassinoides most often grows as a dense multi-stemmed shrub with a rounded crown, typically to heights of 5-6 ft (1.5-1.8 m). [4] Its leaves are simple, opposite, ovate to broadly lanceolate, about 2-4 in (2.5-10 cm) long and have lightly toothed ...
Viburnum dentatum, southern arrowwood or arrowwood viburnum or roughish arrowwood, is a small shrub, native to the eastern United States and Canada from Maine south to northern Florida and eastern Texas. Like most Viburnum, it has opposite, simple leaves and fruit in berry-like drupes. Foliage turns yellow to red in late fall.
Viburnum × pragense (V. rhytidophyllum × V. utile) Viburnum × rhytidophylloides (V. lantana × V. rhytidophyllum)popular evergreen shrub, drought resistant. Shiny green leafs, white flowers. Viburnum rhytidophyllum is a popular evergreen species, grown mainly for its foliage effect of large, dark green leathery leaves with strongly wrinkled ...
Viburnum prunifolium (known as blackhaw or black haw, blackhaw viburnum, sweet haw, and stag bush) is a species of Viburnum native to eastern North America, from Connecticut west to eastern Kansas, and south to Alabama and Texas.
Viburnum × burkwoodii, the Burkwood viburnum, is a hybrid flowering plant in the family Adoxaceae (formerly Caprifoliaceae). It is a cross of garden origin between V. carlesii and V. utile , grown for its early, strongly scented flowers.
Viburnum ellipticum, the common viburnum [3] or oval-leaved viburnum, is a species of shrub in family Adoxaceae. The shrub has deciduous leaves with oval or rounded blades 2 to 6 centimetres (3 ⁄ 4 to 2 + 1 ⁄ 4 in) long. The leaf blade usually has three main longitudinal veins and a shallowly toothed edge.
Viburnum utile, the service viburnum, is a species of flowering plant in the family Viburnaceae, native to central and southern China. [1] A leggy evergreen shrub reaching 4 to 8 ft (1.2 to 2.4 m), it is rarely found in commerce. [ 2 ]
Viburnum opulus is a deciduous shrub growing to 4–5 m (13–16 ft) tall. The leaves are opposite, three-lobed, 5–10 cm (2–4 in) long and broad, with a rounded base and coarsely serrated margins; they are superficially similar to the leaves of some maples, most easily distinguished by their somewhat wrinkled surface with impressed leaf venation.