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NURSERY/LANDSCAPE CAREER DEVELOPMENT EVENT (Revised 2008) Nursery/Landscape 1 6/27/2017 Nursery/Landscape Career Development Event Purpose: Knowledge of the identity of plant materials is essential to an appreciation of use and culture of plants for beautification of the home, grounds, and public areas. Proper identification of a plant is precluded by lack of knowledge of the characteristics of that plant pertaining to growth and flowering habits and specific characteristics of leaves, stems, and flowers. Positive identification of plants is valid only when the Latin name is used. Common names vary from one area to another and cannot be considered positive identification. In order to make this event as nearly authoritative as possible and of utmost value in increasing the student's knowledge of Nursery/Landscape plants, live plant materials, supplemented by slides and photographs, should be used for study and will be used for identification in the area and state contests. An elementary study and short description of 50 selected nursery/landscape plants adaptable to all areas of Louisiana is designed to meet the requirements of the FFA entrants in the area and state events. Objectives: 1. To develop students' skills in identifying common Louisiana landscape plants using both the botanical and common names. 2. To develop students' knowledge of the principles and skills involved in propagation, growth requirements, growing techniques, harvesting, marketing and maintenance of nursery plants and landscape turf. 3. To develop students' knowledge of the principles and techniques of landscape design and construction. 4. To develop students' abilities to identify unhealthy plant conditions due to pest, nutritional or physiological disorders, and mechanical or chemical injury. Rules and Regulations: 1. All general rules apply except where indicated in the specific rules of this event. 2. A team will consist of no less than three but no more than four members. The team score will be calculated by adding the three highest scores of the members participating in the event. The lowest score will be dropped. (Rev. 08) 3. The event will have two phases on the area level and 3 phases on the state level. Phase I: Rev. 95 Nursery/Landscape Identification of Plant Materials: Form 14 will be used to identify the 25 specimens. Each specimen will be designated by a number. Thirty seconds per plant will be allowed in this phase of the contest. Ten points per correct answer will be awarded. Total 2 6/27/2017 for this phase will be 250 points. Phase II: General Knowledge: University personnel will develop and administer an objective test of 50 questions. Questions will be worth five points each. The total for this phase will be 250 points. Phase III: Landscape Design Evaluation (State Level Only): To demonstrate knowledge of the principles and techniques of landscape design and construction. This phase will follow National Rules. 4. Contestants may not have the Identification Card in their possession during the examination. 5. The plants used in the event will be those plants as identified by the scientific names only. The scientific name is the basis for all plant identification and selection. 6. Only live plants (must be planted and have roots) may be used for the identification phase (Revised 99) at the area and state contests. (Revised 08) 7. The four highest scoring teams in each area will represent their respective areas in the state event. 8. Tie Breakers: (apply in the order listed) a. The fourth team member’s score added back in (total score for team). If a team included in the tie has only three members then use “b” then “c”. (Adopted 08) b. The highest score on the general knowledge exam (total score for team) c. The highest score on the identification phase (total score for team) 9. The written exam shall be randomly generated from the bank of test questions adopted in the General Rules in 2007. (Adopted 08) 10. The bank of test questions may be edited yearly to improve the quality of the questions (i.e. fix errors, etc.) Updates shall be highlighted and posted on the state FFA and LATA websites prior to the spring events. (Adopted 08) 11. The official source book for plant reference on this CDE shall be the latest edition of Identification, Selection, and Use of Southern Plants for Landscape Design, by Neil Odenwald and James Turner. It is available from Claitor’s Books (www.claitors.com). (Adopted 08) 12. Adopt a new scorecard where every plant is assigned a number. Each student writes the corresponding plant number on the scorecard. (Adopted 08) Nursery/Landscape 3 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Glossy Abelia BOTANICAL NAME: Abelia x grandiflora A cross between Abelia chinensis and Abelia uniflora. Hardy as far north as New York and Boston, with protection. Fast rate of growth. Performs best in full sunlight and well-drained, fertile soil. Abelia grows well in partial shade, but the flowering is more sparse. Broad, rounded form, twiggy, medium-fine texture, medium-dense mass. Foliage: Simple, opposite, ovate rounded, entire or dentate or attenuate at the base. Acute, 3/4 to 1/2 inches long, serrate, shining above, nearly glabrous. Reddish-bronze when young, bronze-purple in fall. Young stems purple. Flower: White, magenta tube, campanulate, 3/4 inch long, stamens not exserted. Terminal panicles. Blooms from May till frost. Sepals persist after petals fall and thus appear to be flowers. May have several bloom cycles. Fragrant. Very delicate. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Nursery/Landscape Glossy, reddish-green foliage Withstands clipping--excellent for hedges Very fast growth Summer flowering 4 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Red Maple BOTANICAL NAME: Acer rubrum Native from Texas to Florida. Widely distributed in the Cypress-Tupelo Gum swamps in Lower Louisiana. Commonly found in drier parts of the swamps. May be pyramidal and usually branching near ground; dense oblong to oval form. Medium rate of growth; does best in swamplands but will grow in uplands. Propagated seeds. Upright oval form with medium texture and medium density. Foliage: Simple, opposite, palmately five-lobed, coated on under surface with dense white hairs. Red to yellow autumn color. Leaf stems red. Flower: Dioecious, bright red in late winter before foliage, small but profuse. Fruit: Bright red with divergent wings 1/2 to 2 1/2 inches long before foliage. More conspicuous than the flowers and remain about three to four weeks. Branches: Grow upward at about 45 degree angle. Trunk smooth and light gray. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape Excellent red color in late winter, or early spring flowers and fruit Ability to grow in wet soil Red to yellow autumn foliage Clean, colorful, attractive at all seasons Smooth, light gray bark Deciduous tree 5 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Norfolk Island Pine BOTANICAL NAME: Araucaria heterophylla Evergreen tree of great height in native land of Australia. A very dependable tub specimen which grows best in full sun in well-drained, fertile soil. Pyramidal form. Branches are borne in symmetrical, horizontal tiers. Propagation by cutting. Foliage: Awl-shaped in juvenile form, to one-half inch long. Branches five to seven per tier, spirally arranged, fine textured. Light green. Geometrical symmetrical branches. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Indoor plant Tub specimen in protected areas Accent Distinctive form Remarks: 1. Old plants sometimes considered unattractive when branches begin to droop. Not winter hardy in most of the region except for isolated protected positions and in central and south Florida. If kept indoors, container should be turned occasionally to preserve symmetrical form. As much direct sunlight as possible should be provided. Should be fertilized every month during summer and fall if plant is outdoors. 2. 3. 4. Nursery/Landscape 6 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Aucuba BOTANICAL NAME: Aucuba japonica Native of the Himalayas to Japan. Widely grown in southern gardens in shaded positions. Performs best in partial shade where the soil is moist, acid, loose and well-drained. Most plantings require the addition of extra organic matter and sand to improve soil texture. Should be protected from direct midday hot summer sun. Slow to moderate growth rate producing a stiff, upright to irregular form. Foliage: Dark green and shining, ovate or oblong, to seven inches long. Coarsely toothed above the middle. Simple, elliptical. Normally multiple stemmed. Fruit: Clusters of bright red berries. Produced in winter on old, mature female plants only, but both sexes must be planted. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Shaded positions Coarse texture Variegated foliage Containers Accent Remarks: 1. Berries are seldom present, perhaps because both sexes are not usually planted. Variegated forms include: ‘Variegata’-- Dark green with golden-yellow specks and splotches, compact form. ‘Picturata’--Dark green with prominent golden-yellow splotches, especially in center of leaf, slow growing. ‘Sulfur’--Dark green leaves with golden edges, serrated. For best growth, variegated forms require more light than solid green selections. A leaf fungus disease is a major problem. This is usually associated with poor growing conditions--improper drainage, too much light and excessive shading. Especially well adapted for northern and southeastern exposures. Somewhat difficult to predict this plant's performance. Requires more exacting planting conditions than most people think. Seems to be better adapted to growing conditions out of the extreme lower South where an ideal specimen may become five to six feet tall, multiple stemmed and quite dense. In the lower South the aucuba is normally thin and relatively short-lived. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Nursery/Landscape 7 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Azalea BOTANICAL NAME: Azalea indica Native to Japan, grown widely in the southern states north to Memphis, and on the Pacific Coast. Medium rate of growth. Grows in sun and high shade. Provide a moist, sandy soil, good drainage, with high organic matter content. Grows well under high branching trees such as pines. Propagated by cuttings. Dome form, has sympodial branching, medium texture, and is medium dense to dense. Foliage: Alternate, simple, entire, one to one and a half inches long, pale beneath, with bristly hairs on both surfaces. Flower: White, pink, purplish, orange-red, two to three inches across, funnel-shaped. Spring. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. Flowers Mounding form Understory plant Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. Subject to petal and leaf blight, red spider, die-back--all common. Must have acid soil, good drainage, and mulching because of shallow roots. Use raised planting beds where poor drainage (external or internal) exists. Most variegated and pastel flowered forms are small sized and easily kept below six feet. Chlorosis (yellow foliage) is a major problem where pH is too high. Flowering may be extended several weeks in spring by using proper variety. Withstands heavy pruning. Azaleas will not bloom well and become very open in heavy shade. Soil preparation is very critical for success of this plant. Irrigation needed during droughts since flower buds are set in midsummer. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Nursery/Landscape 8 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: River Birch BOTANICAL NAME: Betula nigra A native deciduous tree occurring from Massachusetts to Florida and Kansas and widely distributed in the South along the sandy banks of small streams and rivers but absent from the Mississippi River floodplain. Grows in association with American elm, sycamore, red and silver maples, hackberry, box elder, willow, poplars, and beech. Thrives in a moist sandy, acid soil (5.5 to 6.5 pH). Foliage turns yellow in alkaline soils but fairly adaptable to most conditions. Fast rate of growth. Easily transplanted in small sizes. Propagated by layering, cuttings, and seeds. Upright oval tree, often multi-trunked with branching at about 60o. Texture varies from medium while in leaf to fine in winter. Medium to rather open density. Foliage: Simple, alternate, irregularly doubly serrate leaves to three inches long. Broadly wedged-shaped with impressed veins. Whitish below. Light yellow autumn color but not outstanding. Flower: Male flowers in catkins appearing before the leaves. Female flowers in short upright clusters. Fruit: Oblong, cylinder like cones to one-and-one-half inches long. Individual fruit with two wings. Trunk: Reddish brown shaggy, peeling paper like bark on young trees, turning to dark brown and scaly on older trees. New branches silky brown. Twigs bitter. Highly variable. Landscape Values: Remarks: Nursery/Landscape 1. Exfoliating bark 2. Multi-trunked character 3. Ability to grow in sandy soils 4. Yellow autumn color 5. Naturalistic setting 6. Impressive foliage 1. Aphids (plant lice) may be a severe problem on young trees in early spring. Usually relatively easy to control with a systemic insecticide. Borers can also be troublesome on old specimens. 2. In moist, fertile soils young specimens increase in size very rapidly. 3. At its best for landscape specimen during first ten to fifteen years. Old specimens less impressive as shade trees. Relatively short-lived. 4. Several young specimens may be planted together to make a single multi-trunked cluster. 5. Normally best to begin with a five to six foot tree. Dieback is often a problem in large specimens. 6. Fertilize young trees in late winter just before new growth begins 7. Important to have a soil pH of 6.5 or below; otherwise trees will become chlorotic (yellow). 8. In large, mature trees, falling twigs and dieback cause a litter problem. 9. The ‘Heritage’ cultivar has especially attractive light beige colored bark and produces a broadly oval form and lustrous dark green foliage. Has good resistance to extreme heat, cold and flooding. 10. Occasional pruning may be necessary in winter to remove basal suckers. Never prune large limbs in spring because of excessive bleeding of sap. 11. B. paprifera the paper birch, is a much loved picturesque deciduous tree in the upper South and New England. The white, papery, peeling bark is a distinctive feature. Growing requirements are similar to the river birch. 12. B. pendula, the European white birch, is also a favorite in the north. The weeping form and white bark with block ridges are outstanding features. Do not attempt to grow this tree in the lower South. 9 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Brazil Bougainvillea BOTANICAL NAME: Bougainvillea spectabilis Native to South America. Popular summer tropical vine in extreme South. Medium to fast rate of growth. Easily grows in most soils, thriving best in full sunlight. Blooms most profusely when there is slight moisture and fertilizer stress. Restricting the root area seems to increase the bloom in the South where excessive moisture causes too much vegetative growth. Performs best in semi-arid conditions, such as those found in southern California. Withstands droughts well. Foliage: Simple, alternate, ovate to elliptic lanceolate, commonly entire. More or less pubescent or tomentose, short or blunt pointed and broad at base. Spiny. Flower: Inconspicuous, enclosed by bracts in shades of red, orange and pink. Intense colors. Landscape Values: 1. 2. Fast growth. Overhead structures where color can be seen from above, otherwise a vertical display is best. Container plantings. 3. Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Nursery/Landscape Bougainvillea glabra--Leaves are glabrous or nearly so. Colors range from purple and magenta to lighter shades. Prolific flowering in full sun with moderately dry and infertile soil. Rampant growth normally at expense of flowers. Listed in many references as Bougainvillea brasiliensis. Cultivars: ‘Hawaii’--Variegated golden yellow foliage. ‘Orange King’--Bronzy orange flowers in sprays. ‘Sunfire’--Strong vine, bright rose-yellow flowers. ‘Scarlett O'Hara’--Fast growing, bright red flowers. ‘Rosenka’--Dwarf, mounding, free flowering, gold and pink. ‘Barbara Karst’--Masses of brilliant ruby red flowers. Good in dry areas. Cold damaged parts should be trimmed back in late winter. A plant should be maintained in the same container for several years. 10 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Schefflera (Octopus Tree) BOTANICAL NAME: Brassaia actinophylla Native of New Guinea, Java and Australia. Performs best in filtered sunlight and shade and a well-drained, moist, fertile soil. Propagated by air-layering. Foliage: Glossy, palmately compound, usually six to eight leaflets, elliptic, leathery. Woody branches terminate with compound leaf rosette. Medium coarse, lacquered green. Flower: Three to four feet long, terminal on mature plants. Landscape Values: 1. 2. Interior plant Tub planting in protected areas Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Mealybug, aphids (plant lice) and spider mites are major insect pests. Tolerant of medium-low light intensity and relatively low humidity. Leaf disease a major problem indoors. One of the best selections for large scale indoor plantings. For indoor use, with as much direct sunlight as possible. In low-lighted interiors, bottom leaves turn yellow and drop. Soil should be only slightly moist to the touch, and fertilized every four to six weeks with liquid fertilizer recommended for indoor plants, following manufacturer's recommendations. Indoor specimens should be moved to porches, covered patios, and other outdoor protected areas during summer months for improved growing environment. Increase frequency of watering and fertilization. Protect from danger of frost. When indoor specimen becomes thin and straggly with excessive leaf drop, cut it back to within 15 to 18 inches of the soil and allow new shoots to form. Move plant to a shady, outdoor position in early spring where conditions are more favorable. By late autumn a new plant may grow from the old stump. Observe water needs closely and fertilize every two to three weeks. Fairly healthy specimens which have lost most lower foliage may be air-layered. Listed in most references among the indoor plants requiring medium light. The recommended light is around 200 foot-candles and the minimum is approximately 75 foot-candles for a 12-hour duration. 6. 7. 8. 9. Nursery/Landscape 11 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Boxwood BOTANICAL NAME: Buxus microphylla ‘Japonica’ Native to Japan. The most popular Boxwood for southern plantings. Medium rate of growth. Suited to any well-drained soil. Thrives in sun and partial shade. Propagated by cuttings, suckers, division or layering. Hardy with protection in New York and central New England. Rounded, compact low, vigorous shrub, fine texture, dense mass. Foliage: Simple, opposite, medium yellow-green, new growth light green to one inch long. Obovate or obovate-lanceolate. Young branches usually angled or winged and hairy. Small cleft at end of leaf. Broadest slightly above middle. Flower: Inconspicuous Fruit: Inconspicuous Landscape Values: 1. 2. Neat, compact small evergreen shrub Excellent for hedges Remarks: 1. All boxwoods have shallow roots and require a mulch until well established. Should not be cultivated deeply. Red spider mites are major problem. Nematodes and root fungus disease are major problems and may be serious enough to question the wisdom of using plant in large quantities. 2. 3. Nursery/Landscape 12 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Common Camellia BOTANICAL NAME: Camellia japonica Native of China and Japan. Popular winter flowering shrub for outdoor culture from North Carolina to the Gulf of Mexico and on the Pacific Coast; greenhouse culture in northern region. Relatively slow rate of growth. Provide a loose, fertile, well-drained, acid (pH of 5.0 to 6.0) soil. Maintain a two to three inch layer of mulch around plants to keep soil moist and to protect from intense heat. Propagated by seeds, grafting and cuttings from current season's growth in summer. Upright, oval form with upright branching and spreading as the plant gets older. Medium texture, medium density in shade; dense, positive form in full sunlight. Foliage: Alternate, simple, toothed leaves, four inches long. Dark green and shiny above. Flower: Red, pink, white or variegated, to five inches across. Single, partly or completely double. Blooms in late autumn and through spring. Fruit: Seeds nearly globose to 3/4-inch across. Capsule. Produced in spring. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Long blooming season Shady, understory conditions Glossy green, leathery foliage Upright, rather positive form Remarks: 1. Scale insect is a serous problem and will normally require annual treatment. Its positive form often makes it difficult to combine with other plants except in shade where the form is somewhat irregular. Old specimens may be reclaimed as small evergreen trees by careful pruning. Partial shade is essential for small plants, and some shade is beneficial for larger ones. Winter shade is needed to protect foliage and flowers. Essential to provide well-drained site with both adequate surface ad internal drainage. Plantings can be raised if necessary to ensure adequate drainage. Fertilize with an azalea-camellia fertilizer or a complete fertilizer such as an 8-8-8, or similar, at the rate of 1/4 to 1/2 pound per well-established plant. Fertilizer, should be applied in late winter just before new growth begins. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape 13 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Redbud BOTANICAL NAME: Cercis canadensis Native from Canada to Florida and Texas. Widely distributed in the South except for the coastal region and areas which have poorly drained soil. Fast growth when young. Performs well in full sunlight to partial shade and in a fertile, welldrained, acid soil. Volunteers are abundant where mature trees exist. Upright, oval, irregular form. Fine texture in bloom, medium to medium-coarse in foliage with seed pods. Medium density. Foliage: Alternate, simple, entire, broad cordate, abruptly acute, three to five inches long, five to nine prominent radiating veins. Swelling below leaf blade. Dull green. Flower: Tiny pea-like, rosy pink (magenta), 1/2 inch in clusters on old wood. Sometimes on the trunk and branches. Blooms in February to March. Tree is three to four years old before flowering. Fruit: Flattened pod, green with magenta, turning brown, almost black in fall and winter. To 3 1/2 inches long. Branches: Blackish brown, two-ranked; often quite irregular. Zigzag stems. Lenticels on the stems. Landscape: 1. 2. 3. 4. Early spring color Yellow autumn color Small flowering tree Under-story tree Remarks: 1. 2. 3. Short-lived, usually about 15--20 years in the lower South. Leaf spot is a serious disease which defoliates trees prematurely. Not well adapted to the extreme lower South because of several problems. Among these are stem canker and borers. Some isolated old specimens are in the area but not abundant. Cultivars: ‘Alba’--White flowers ‘Forestry Pansy’--Purple foliage ‘Oklahoma’--Glossy foliage, dark purple flowers 4. Nursery/Landscape 14 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese (Flowering) Quince BOTANICAL NAME: Chaenomeles speciosa Native of Asia, widely distributed throughout the United States. Well adapted for North Louisiana. Medium fast rate of growth; prefers sun; thrives in loamy soil; tolerant of heavy pruning. Most effective in cooler areas. Propagated by seeds and root or half-ripened stem cuttings. Rounded, dense twiggy and thorny mass, medium texture. Foliage: Alternate, simple, ovate or oblong, acute, sharply serrate, dark glossy green, one and a half to three inches long, bronze as leaves unfurl in the spring. Leaf drop in early fall. Spiny branches. Leafy, kidney-shaped stipules at base of each leaf. Flower: Flowers apple blossom-like to two inches across, two to six flowers in cluster, clustered tightly along branches in early February. Colors include scarlet, pink, white, orange, salmon in single and double varieties. Fruit: Quince-like, pome, two to four inches in diameter. Green to reddish green, turning yellow in fall. Used for jelly. Apple-like. Landscape Value: 1. 2. 3. Flower in late winter and early spring Deciduous shrub Massing Remarks: 1. 2. Sheds leaves much earlier in south Louisiana due to leaf diseases. Several plants needed for cross-pollination if fruit is desirable. Nursery/Landscape 15 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Flowering Dogwood BOTANICAL NAME: Cornus florida Native from Maine to Florida and Texas. Widely distributed in the uplands of the lower South but absent from the Mississippi river floodplain. Fast growth as a seedling but relatively slow after third year. Performs best in partial shade and sun where conditions are ideal. Provide an acid (5.5 to 6.5 pH), fertile, loose, moist, welldrained soil with a low water table. Propagated by cuttings, budding, seeds, and grafting. Dense, mounding form in full sunlight; more upright-oval in shade. Branching horizontal and sympodial. Medium Texture. Relatively open in shade. Foliage: Opposite, simple, entire elliptic to oval. Two to six inches long. Bright red in fall. Young stems are green, turning gray with age. Bark is in small block segments. Flower: Small yellow in dense heads, subtended by four large, petal-like white bracts, each with a deformed blackened apex. Very showy, appearing in spring before and after foliage, depending on genetic strain. Fruit: Bunches of bright red berried in late summer and fall, sometimes lasting through winter if not eaten by birds. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 1. 2. Remarks: 3. Nursery/Landscape Flowers (bracts) Red autumn color Horizontal branches Red fruit attracts birds Small flowering tree Understory tree Naturalistic settings Winter form Interesting bark Fertilizer requirements for dogwoods are quite low. Flower size of the new grafted cultivars is twice the size of native seedlings. Very sensitive to heavy, poorly drained soils and is most often a failure on sites where the top soil has been disrupted. This is a highly unpredictable tree, and there are far more failures than successes in the lower South. 16 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Spotted Dumb Cane BOTANICAL NAME: Dieffenbachia maculata cv. Native of tropical America. Popular indoor plant in the south. Grown primarily for large showy, variegated foliage. Erect form when small and often an irregular, bending form as a mature plant. Leaf patterns vary greatly according to cultivar. Will survive indoors with filtered sunlight but grows best when it receives direct sunlight several hours per day. A southern or southeastern exposure is preferred for best indoor culture. Use a soil mix with a high organic matter and sand content to ensure adequate drainage. Propagation is by stem cuttings. Each joint with a bud will form a new plant when partially buried in potting soil mix. Foliage: Large, oblong to elliptic. Coarse, with striking, irregular patterns. Three times as long as broad; sheathing leaf stalks almost as long as blade. Prominent joints on stems. Flower: Spadices within thick spathes on old plants. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. Indoor container plant Greenhouse Outdoors in protected positions during summer Remarks: 1. Should be kept only moderately moist and fertilized monthly when plant is actively growing using a liquid indoor plant food. Mealy bugs and aphids (plant lice) are common insect pest. Several new selections available in the trade. Older and still popular cultivars include the following: ‘Amoena’--Dark green foliage, white markings. ‘Picta’--Pale green with cream marking. ‘Rudolph Loehrs’--Yellow leaves edged with green and marked with creamy white spots. Dieffenbachia is extremely sensitive to cold temperatures well above freezing. Wilting often occurs at approximately 50o F. Plant contains poisonous sap that may cause temporary speech loss if eaten. When used indoors, dieffenbachia requires medium light. Recommend 200 foot-candles of light for a 12-hour duration, with a 75-foot candle minimum. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape 17 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Warneckii Dracaena or Striped Dracaena BOTANICAL NAME: Dracaena deremensis ‘Warneckii’ Among the most widely used tropicals. For general indoor plantings it grows in reduced light but will tolerate morning sunlight if the change to outdoors is gradual. Provide a fertile, loose, welldrained soil. A clustering of foliage formed on tall stalks with basal foliage dropping as plants mature, exposing bare trunks. Medium texture and medium density. Moderately-slow growth rate. Foliage: Landscape Values: Remarks: A rosette cluster of sessile sword-shaped leaves, with green and white stripes. Stout branching canes are produced with no foliage on the lower portions of old, tall canes. 1. Dependable interior plant 2. Variegated foliage 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape 3. Relatively low light plant 4. Distinctive form and texture Improper moisture relationships (excess, insufficient and spasmodic watering) cause leaf tip browning. Very low light intensity may also cause premature leaf drop and tip burn. Many horticulture variations available in the trade. New selections include dwarf and more compact forms. Fertilize every four to six weeks when growing indoors, provided that growing conditions are reasonable good. When growing outdoors, during the summer, fertilize every two to three weeks. Plant in a porous soil mix containing a high organic and sand content. Repot every two to three years or when plant becomes severely pot-bound. Many of the problems associated with growing this dracaena indoors is normally due to inadequate natural light. For best results, provide four to six hours of natural light per day from a southern or southeastern exposure. Plants growing in positions with little or no natural light must be rotated every six to eight weeks to locations with better growing conditions. The dracaenas are among the best indoor foliage plants for positions which receive a minimum amount of natural light. Recommendations are for 100150 foot-candles of light (twelve hour duration) with a minimum amount of 50 foot-candles. Tall, straggly dracaenas may be reclaimed as shorter, more compact specimens by cutting back tall canes to about two feet from the soil line. Side buds will produce new growth relatively fast, especially if plants are place outdoors during the summer months. Periodic grooming required as old foliage becomes unsightly. ‘Janet Craig’ is a highly popular selection which has broad dark green leaves. 18 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Corn Plant Dracaena BOTANICAL NAME: Dracaena fragrans ‘Massangeana’ Popular indoor plant that tolerates low light intensity. Responds best to fertile, well-drained potting mixture of garden loam soil, organic matter and sand. Medium growth rate, coarse texture. Foliage: Strap-shaped rosette of dark green, arching, broadly striped and banded leaves. Yellow down center; 18--24 inches long, three to four inches wide. Canes large and cornstalk-like. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. Large scale indoor plants Relatively low light requirements. Erect form Remarks: 1. Tip burn is a common problem; usually a sign of excessive moisture or inadequate light. One of the most versatile of all indoor plants. Direct sun outdoors will scorch foliage. Mealy bugs and aphids are common insect problems, but there are several insecticides available for their control. Soil moisture should be kept on the slightly dry side. When growing indoors, should be fertilized every month to six weeks depending on the amount of light. Use a liquid indoor plant food. Should be removed to outdoors in a protected place during the summer months to encourage accelerated growth. Should be watered daily and fertilized every two weeks following manufacturer's recommendations. The loss of lower leaves as plant produces new foliage and becomes older is a natural condition. Several improved horticultural selections available in the trade. Recommended 12 hours of 100--150 foot-candles of light with a minimum of 50 foot-candles. This dracaena performs well in reduced light and is likely among the top two or three plants most suitable for indoor uses. Even individuals who have a difficult time growing plants can be reasonably successful with this one. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Nursery/Landscape 19 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Fatsia BOTANICAL NAME: Fatsia japonica Native of Japan. Widely planted in the region for its attractive foliage. Needs a loose, welldrained, moist soil, and partial shade, especially during the afternoon. Slow rate of growth until it becomes well-established and then somewhat more rapid. Propagated by cuttings and seeds. Dense, rounded form with foliage at top of leggy stems. Coarse texture. Foliage: Stiff, shiny above, orbicular to reniform in outline. Eight to 10 inches across, leathery cordate or truncate at base, cut below the middle into five to nine ovateoblong, dentate and undulate lobes, with sinuses open at bottom. Petioles eight to 12 inches long. Dark blue-green. Flower: Creamy white, in late fall, in umbels more than one inch across, clustered on oneinch long stems. Somewhat prominent. Fruit: Rounded clusters of berrylike fruit. Each berry 1/3 inch across, turning black, gives a coarser texture to umbels than the flowers do. Produced in winter and early spring. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Coarse Texture Glossy evergreen leaves Outstanding shade tolerance Winter blooms Tub specimen Moderate tolerance to salt spray Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Not fully hardy in cold winters in upper South. Leave are small and often burn in full sunlight. Cannot tolerate heavy, wet, poorly drained soil. Selections with more compact forms are available in the trade. Sometimes used as an indoor plant, but it must receive several hours of direct light. Place outside during summer months. Seeds collected in late winter and early spring are easy to germinate. Clean black pulp off of seeds and plant in a mixture of moist peat moss and sand. Fatsias should be fertilized in late winter or early spring. Use a general all-purpose fertilizer. Scale insect is a severe pest. Severe infestation often kills plants. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape 20 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Weeping Fig BOTANICAL NAME: Ficus benjamina A large tree in its native habitat of India but widely used for large scale indoor plantings. Will grow in full sun to partial shade. For potting mixture, see Ficus elastica. Medium density, medium fine texture, graceful drooping branches. Medium growth indoors; rapid outdoors. Foliage: Oval to elliptic, two to five inches long, dark glossy green. Aerial rootlets common. Fruit: Red, about 1/2 inch long but not common indoors. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. Large scale indoor container specimen Medium fine texture Graceful, drooping branches Remarks: 1. 2. 3. Sudden changes in growing conditions cause leaf drop. Not hardy for outdoor use in Louisiana. Banyan Tree is also a common name, but the true Banyan Tree is Ficus benghalensis. Versatile indoor plant if several hours of natural light (preferably southern exposure) are available daily. Intolerant of low indirect light. Severe leaf drop will occur. Keep soil slightly moist. Responds well to outdoor culture during the summer in a protected position. Water daily and fertilize every month when growing outdoors. 4. 5. Nursery/Landscape 21 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Decora Rubber Plant BOTANICAL NAME: Ficus elastica ‘Decora’ The rubber plant is a large tree in native habitat of Malaya. A fertile, well-drained potting mixture (by volume) of five parts organic matter (pine bark, peat moss, or equal), two parts sandy loam soil, and one part coarse builders' sand is a good growing medium. There are other good mixes available. Grows well in full sunlight to partial shade. Medium growth rate indoors. Rapid outdoors in warm climates. Coarse texture, open density. Foliage: Alternate, oblong-elliptic, six to 11 inches long. Thick. Dark green and glossy. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 1. 2. 3. 4. Remarks: 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Nursery/Landscape Large-scale indoor container specimen Coarse texture Irregular form Dark blue-green foliage Cold hardy for outdoor use in Zone 10 and the lower part of Zone 9. Sudden changes in growing conditions cause leaf drop. Leaf drop influenced by light, moisture, and humidity. Old spindly plants may be rejuvenated by cutting back top to within 18 inches of the soil line in late winter. Place plant outdoors during summer months. New shoots will form and begin growth in late autumn. ‘Decora’ is a very fine cultivar available in the trade. Has larger, broader leaves than standard rubber plant. Ficus pandurata is popular cultivar. Needs several hours of natural sunlight for indoor culture, preferably southern or southeastern exposure. Place outdoors in a protected area during summer months. Fertilize monthly and water daily to encourage fast growth. Relatively inexpensive, highly promoted plant that is readily available. There are more disappointments than successes with this plant. Rubber plants are intolerant of harsh growing conditions of most indoor spaces. Most critical factor is light intensity. A warm region outdoor plant that has been forced into places where it does not perform well. Along with other popular indoor plants the rubber plant is grown for export in large outdoor nurseries in Central America. Requires medium light. Recommend 200 foot-candles of light for a 12hour duration with 75 foot-candles as the minimum. 22 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Common Gardenia, Cape Jasmine BOTANICAL NAME: Gardenia jasminoides Native of China. A highly popular shrub in southern landscapes. Grows well in full sunlight to partial shade. Provide a moist, well-drained, fertile soil with a pH of 5.5 to 6.0. Foliage: Often whorled, undulate, lanceolate-obovate, two to five inches long. Mediumcoarse texture. Dark, glossy green. Flower: White, appearing waxy. Early summer blooms with a few in fall. Very fragrant. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Mass screening Summer flowering Evergreen shrub Tub specimen Distinctive fragrance Mounding form Dark, blue-green foliage Combines will with other shrubs. Remarks: 1. White fly, nematodes, sooty mold and cottony cushion scale are serious problems. Require periodic spraying. A very popular plant in old gardens of the South. Chlorosis (yellowing of foliage) is common problem, usually because iron is unavailable. Very sensitive to heavy, poorly drained clay soil. Gardenia thunbergia- Small foliage and flowers. Showy fruits in the fall. Outstanding specimen at Rosedown Gardens, St. Francisville, LA. Cultivars: ‘August Beauty’--Dense mass of lustrous green foliage. Large flowers. ‘Mystery’--Medium size, glossy green foliage, creamy white flowers. ‘Veitchi’--Longer blooming period than above cultivars. Many flowers. Used by florists for cut flowers. Performance of gardenias is somewhat unpredictable. With favorable conditions they are basically trouble-free except for a few insect pests. In heavy poorly drained soils, plants become yellow and are difficult to grow. Fertilize shrubs in late winter with 8-8-8, or similar, at the rate of 1/4 pound per square yard of area covered by the plant. Gardenias are long-lived shrubs where growing conditions are favorable. Provide space for large plant. Otherwise, frequent pruning is needed. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Nursery/Landscape 23 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Ginkgo, Maidenhair Tree BOTANICAL NAME: Ginkgo biloba Native of China; has been widely planted in the United States. Sometimes referred to as a living fossil. One of our oldest known plants. Known to have grown for 150 million years. Very slow growth. Thrives in well-drained soil. Propagate by seeds, layering, grafting, or cuttings. Irregular, broad, oval form, with horizontal branching. Medium texture. Open to medium density. Foliage: Simple, two to five inch broad, fan-shaped with parallel venation, one to four inch petioles, thin, clustered at the ends of spur shoots, turning golden yellow in fall. Flower: Two types on different trees; staminate, yellow in catkins; pistillate, long stalked, inconspicuous. Fruit: Green to orange-yellow with a silvery bloom. about one inch diameter, pulp foulsmelling. Plum-like. Undesirable. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 1. 2. 3. 4. Remarks: Nursery/Landscape Street tree Long lived Strong structure Fall color Consistent, symmetrical, positive form Deciduous tree Female trees produce foul smelling fruit. Plant only male trees. Free of insects and disease and tolerant of city conditions. Spectacular autumn color; complete leaf drop in short period--5-7 days. Drought tolerant. 24 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: English Ivy BOTANICAL NAME: Hedera helix Native of Europe, Canary Island, North Africa and Asia. Brought to the United States by early colonists. Slow to medium growth rate. Best in shade and in moist, acid soil. Propagate by cuttings or layering. Make 6-10 inch long cuttings in November or December. Till beds 8-10 inches deep, add generous amount of humus, set cuttings 8-10 inches apart. Rooting occurs by early spring. Woody vine climbing to 40 feet in trees. Fine, medium and coarse textures depending on cultivar. Medium density, noncompetitive covering. Climbs by aerial rootlets. Foliage: Alternate, simple, entire, coarsely dentate or usually three to five lobed. Dark, lustrous green above, pale or yellowish green beneath. Long petioled. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape Shade tolerant ground cover Arbor, trellis, fence covering Vigorous vein Excellent ground cover for under-plantings--bulbs, other shade tolerant plants Espalier, topiaries Container plantings Planters. Often seen growing on tree trunks and in tree canopies. Seldom affects the host plant unless growth blocks out sunlight. Many cultivars with distinctive foliage, but most not readily available. Susceptible to root and stem fungus which kills plant. Use fungicide drench several times each month in July, August, and September. Follow manufacturer's directions. English Ivy can be grown in considerable sunlight if a moist, fertile planting bed is prepared and maintained during early years of plant establishment. A loose, porous, well-drained soil is essential for acceptable performance. Two or more foliage types may be observed on same plant depending on age of planting. Variation in foliage is normally observed then ivy begins to climb. Flowering and fruiting often occur on mature plants. More than 50 named cultivars with many leaf variations from lobed to round and heart-shaped that have smooth, wavy, ruffled, or curled leaf margins. Fertilize sparingly in late winter only. Late applications encourage root and stem diseases. Use 1 pound of complete fertilizer (8-8-8) per 100 square feet of planting. 25 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Hosta, Plantain Lilly BOTANICAL NAME: Hosta species A native of China and Japan and a highly popular perennial over much of the country. Low growing, tufted plants especially well adapted for the cooler regions of the country in Zones 5,6, and 7. However, they will grow well farther south if given a cool, moist soil in semishade. Some species perform well in Zone 9 where they have a relatively short dormant period. Foliage forms a low mounding clump with dense growth and coarse texture. Propagated by division of clumps and seeds. Foliage: Broadly oval, heart-shaped to lance-shaped leaves, each six to ten inches long, four to six inches wide. Yellow-green to dark blue-green depending on species and cultivars. Parallel veins normally prominent. Foliage dies back to the ground in winter. Flower: White, blue or lilac flowers in terminal clusters on tall stalks above foliage. Tubular florets to two inches or more. Hyacinth-like. Summer and autumn. Many cultivars fragrant. Landscape Values: Remarks: 1. Ground cover 2. Coarse, textured clump foliage 3. Summer flowers 4. Shade tolerance 1. Hostas do well in woodland settings where the soil is porous and where there is a high organic matter content. Good drainage is essential. They are easy to grow and perform better in the lower South than once thought. 2. An occasional spraying of foliage to prevent damage by leaf eating insects is about all the special care they require during the summer. Fertilize in early spring with an all purpose plant food. 3. Nursery/Landscape 5. Detail design 6. Naturalistic setting 7. Borders Some of the most popular species and cultivars include the following: H. Decorata -- Oval leaves with winged petioles, white margins, lavender-purple flowers on thirty inch stems in July. H.fotunei -- Large, oval, blue-green leaves, to two feet tall, purple or white flowers. H. ‘Honeybells’ -- Compact form, fragrant lavender flowers on two foot stalks, late summer. H. japonica -- Oval to lance-shaped leaves tapering at both ends, four to six inches long. Lavender to lilac colored flowers on eighteen to twenty-four inch stalks. H. ventricosa -- Leaves broadly oval, narrowed to winged stalks, four to nine inches long. Petioles twenty inches long. Blue flowers, June to July Reported to do well in the deep South. H. plantaginea ‘Royal Standard’ -- Vigorous grower with glossy, light green leaves, fragrant flowers on two foot stems in August. H. sieboldiana ‘Elegans’ -- a large species, stalks to two feet tall, broad, puckered, seer-sucker-like leaves and distinctive bluish color. H. ‘Gold Crown’ -- Has a tight rosette crown with thick yellow-edged leaves. H. undulata ‘Albo-marginata’ -- an excellent small tufted variegated selection 26 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Chinese Holly BOTANICAL NAME: Ilex cornuta cv. Native of north China. A widely cultivated holly and parent of several popular cultivars. Medium-fast growth rate. Best in fertile, well-drained soil with a clay base, although quite tolerant of most conditions. Dense in sun, relatively sparse foliage in shade. Propagate by seeds or cuttings. Usually an upright, oval form with dense foliage. Considerable seedling variation. Medium texture. Foliage: Alternate, simple, quadrangular-oblong, with three strong spines of nearly equal size at the dilated apex, one to two strong spines on each side of truncate base, but rounded at base of older plants. Dark, glossy green above, 1/2 - 5 inches long, sharp pointed lobes. Bristly. Plastic-like. Flower: Greenish white. No major landscape value. Female plants produce berries without seeds. Fruit: Scarlet, berrylike drupe, clustered, short pedicels, 3/8 inch in diameter. Landscape Value: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Red berries conspicuous in winter Glossy, dark, evergreen foliage Vigorous plant Screen and barrier Specimen Cut foliage Remarks: 1. Important cultivars available in the trade: ‘Burfordii’--Burford is like parent, but leaves are entire, ending in one blunt point at tip. Less bristly appearance. Male plant not needed for berries. ‘Rotunda’--Dwarf Chinese holly. Has rounded form to 4 x 4 feet. Yellow-green foliage. Very spiny. ‘Carissa’-- Broad-spreading to mounding form, to three feet tall with a four to five foot spread, smooth foliage, one spine. ‘Nellie R. Stevens’- Dark, glossy green foliage and excellent fruiting. ‘Needlepoint’-- Very dark green foliage, dense upright form, excellent fruiting cultivar. Highly popular in the trade. Largest fruit of all the cultivated hollies. Scale insect a severe problem in the lower South. 2. 3. Nursery/Landscape 27 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Holly BOTANICAL NAME: Ilex crenata cv. One of the best of the Japanese selections. Grows well in sun to partial shade, in moist, fertile, well-drained soil. Upright, oval form. Dense compact growth. Medium texture. Medium growth rate. Propagate by cuttings. Foliage: Alternate, elliptic to obovate-oblong. Dark, rich green. Five-eights to 1/4 inch long, about 1/2 inch wide. Boxwood-like foliage. Flower: Inconspicuous. Spring. No major landscape value. Fruit: Black. autumn and winter. Often concealed by foliage. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Medium-small evergreen shrub Clipped hedge Upright form Mass and single specimen plantings Remarks: 1. Both surface and internal drainage are essential for the Japanese hollies. Otherwise they are plagued with root disease problems. Old specimens have interesting, somewhat irregular form but are seldom seen because of severe pruning techniques. Ilex crenata ‘Rotundifolia’ is oldest and for many years was most popular Japanese holly. Seldom used much because of root rot and other disease problems. Noted for its upright, oval form and dark green foliage. Ilex crenata ‘Microphylla’ has an upright, dense form with small, fine textured leaves. 2. 3. 4. Nursery/Landscape 28 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: American Holly BOTANICAL NAME: Ilex opaca Native from Massachusetts to Florida and Texas. Widely distributed. Slow growth rate; does well in sun and shade. Propagate by seed and cuttings. Prefers fertile, well-drained soil. Found in rich, moist bottomlands, borders of swamps and dry but wellprotected slopes. Frequently found on sandy soils near coast. Even, pyramidal form, medium texture, dense mass. Short spreading branches. Sparse canopy when growing in shade. Foliage: Oval or elliptic. Lanceolate with large remote spiny teeth, rarely entire, dull green above, yellowish beneath. Variable in size, shape and spines. Flower: White, inconspicuous, dioecious Fruit: Bright red berry-like drupe on female plant, 1/4 inch in diameter on current year's growth, usually solitary. Autumn to spring. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape Form Abundant fruit Evergreen Long lived, very desirable ornamental Yellow-green foliage Gray trunk Wildlife food Screening 29 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Yaupon BOTANICAL NAME: Ilex vomitoria Native from Virginia to Florida and Texas; tolerates most conditions in Louisiana including coastal areas. Native to woodland areas; grows best in well-drained soils. Fruits best in open sunny sites, but also grows well in partial shade. Medium rate of growth. Propagated by seed. Oval to oblong form with irregular branching, often multi-trunked, fine texture and medium density. Foliage: Alternate, simple, oval or oblong, 1/2 to one inch long, obtuse, crenate-serrate, glabrous. Gray twigs and trunk. Flower: Tiny white flowers in spring, clustered on branches of the previous year. Dioecious. Fruit: Translucent red berries in late fall through winter, 1/4 inch diameter. Only female plants have berries. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Multiple stems, gray branches Excellent fruiting Good for seaside locations--salt spray tolerant Screening mass Sculptural form Remarks: 1. 2. 3. Berry-bearing strains usually called variety 'Foemina.' Fruit reported to be eaten by several species of birds. Population is abundant in Louisiana--often forming thickets and becoming a pest in some situations. Frequently given special pruning treatments in the trade for making unique forms for landscape projects. A very tough and dependable holly. 4. 5. Nursery/Landscape 30 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Dwarf Pfitzer Juniper BOTANICAL NAME: Juniperus chinensis ‘Pfitzeriana’ Native of Himalayas, China, and Japan. Very popular low-spreading evergreen in the region. Medium-fast growth rate. Prefers sunny, open situations. Grows best in sandy to loamy, moderately moist soil, but grows well in rather dry, rocky or gravelly soil. Propagate by seeds which germinate in the second or third year, or by cuttings of nearly ripened wood in fall. Broad, wide-spreading shrub with horizontally spreading branches. Fine texture. Dense mass, becoming somewhat open with advanced age. Foliage: Opposite or whorled, linear, pointed and spreading or scalelike, appressed, rhombic, obtuse, and grayish green in tiers of four with bluish band above. Juvenile foliage may be awl-shaped. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Spreading form Texture Vigorous growth Durable Mass plantings Old, reclaimed specimens Long-lived Remarks: 1. Most plants with needle-shaped leaves root more easily than those with scalelike leaves; side graft the latter in winter. Old specimens are very picturesque but require considerable vertical and horizontal space for natural spread. Juniperus chinensis ‘Hetzi’ is another popular juniper. Has 45 degree branching rather than the horizontal lines of the Pfitzer. ‘Pfitzer Aurea’ (Golden Pfitzer) is similar to regular Pfitzer but has yellow-tipped foliage. Allow ample space for broad spread. Difficult to confine in small space and not easily pruned. Most junipers difficult to transplant. Usually not worth effort and cost considering high mortality rate. Get professional help for moving large sizes. Plant pests include bagworms, spider mites, canker, and juniper blight. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Nursery/Landscape 31 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Crape Myrtle BOTANICAL NAME: Lagerstroemia indica cv. Native of China. Widely naturalized in the southern states. Unrivaled among small flowering trees in ease of culture, length of bloom and many other features. Performs best in full sun and in loose, well-drained soil with a pH of 5.0 to 6.5. Mounded to upright form with irregular branches. Medium-fine texture, open to medium density. Foliage: Mostly opposite, entire leaves, elliptic to oblong, to two inches. Dark, dull green; yellow to red autumn color but highly unpredictable. Flower: To one and 1/2 inches with fringed petals in showy terminal panicles. Blooms profusely all summer. White, pink, purple, watermelon red are common colors. Fruit: Woody capsule, dark brown, persists most of the winter. Branches: Upright grown. Attractive exfoliating bark. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Irregular, buff colored, stems with interesting detail Summer and early fall flowering Autumn color (varies with cultivars) Baffle and screen Small flowering tree Remarks: 1. Most successful small flowering tree for the region. Crape myrtle has many landscape values and adapts to wide range of growing conditions. Highly abused tree because of improper pruning practices. Branches or trunks should be thinned not sheared across the top of specimen. Clean, unbroken lines of trunks and exfoliating bark are important winter features. Improper pruning causes heavy, swollen joint-like structures on main trunks. Light tip pruning in mid to late summer induces more flowering. Relatively easy to transplant in large sizes. Only a reasonable size soil ball is necessary when transplanting large specimens. Mildew, sooty mold and aphids are serious pests. Several applications of an insecticide during growing season may be necessary for control. Main limitation to successful performance of the crape myrtle is its unwillingness to grow in shade. Form is weak and flowers sparse in shade. Plants become spindly in old established landscapes where large tree canopies compete with crape myrtles. Very difficult to purchase crape myrtles by cultivar names and match colors. Highly desirable selections are easily vegetatively propagated to increase a preferred type. Dormant cuttings, 6-8 inches long, root with little difficulty during winter months. Take cuttings in December and place in moist, sandy soil for remainder of the winter. Rooting normally occurs in mid-spring. Select crape myrtles at very early age for particular form, types, and number of trunks. Tree is widely adapted for varying space types. Single-trunked plants are available for small, restricted spaces; multiple-trunked forms available for large specimen types and for use in groupings. Difficult to select crape myrtles for landscape projects since unable to specify cultivars for particular form and color. Most nurseries list crape myrtles only by color or color and size. Few cultivars developed prior to the last decade. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape 32 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Privet BOTANICAL NAME: Ligustrum japonicum cv. Native of Japan and Korea. Widely used evergreen shrub in the South. Medium-fast growth rate. Best in loose, fertile soil and full sun to partial shade. Tolerant of most conditions except poor drainage. Propagate by seeds and cuttings. Narrow upright branches with rounded canopy. Medium texture and dense foliage. Foliage: Opposite, simple, entire, rounded ovate to ovate-oblong 2-4 inches long. Smooth margins. Dark green and glossy above, light green beneath. Wavy leaf, 4-5 pairs of veins. Flower: Small white sessile flowers in terminal panicles. Blooms in spring. Heavy fragrance. A nuisance in some situations. Fruit: Dark berrylike drupe in terminal clusters. Oval, about 1/3 inch in diameter. Green, turning black in autumn. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Dense evergreen with glossy foliage Fragrant flowers Autumn and winter fruit Trained as a multi-trunked, small evergreen tree Clipped or unclipped hedge Screen Remarks: 1. White flies a major insect problem. Spray several times during the summer. Birds are attracted to fruit, especially in mid to late winter. Tolerates heavy pruning. Prune in late winter before new growth begins. L. texanum reported to produce fewer water sprouts. Ligustrum coriaceum (curly-leaf ligustrum) is an upright, dense evergreen shrub, highly promoted in the trade. Tolerates urban conditions well. Cultivars ‘Howardi’ and ‘Frasieri’ have variegated foliage. Although many people dislike ligustrum, it is a highly dependable evergreen shrub or small tree that tolerates adverse conditions in many landscapes. Major disease problems reported are one or more leaf spots and root rot. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Nursery/Landscape 33 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Tuliptree BOTANICAL NAME: Liriodendron tulipifera Native from Massachusetts to Wisconsin, southward to Florida and Mississippi. Widely distributed in the South. Absent in the floodplains. Grows best in moist, fertile soil with good drainage. Normally present with other hardwoods. Medium-fast growth rate. Erect, narrow-oval to pyramidal form, branching at approximately 60 degrees, tall, straight trunk. Medium-coarse texture. Medium density. Propagated by seeds. Self-seeding. Foliage: Simple, alternate, 3-5 inches long, almost as broad. Apex truncate, notched, maybe entire. Four lobed, similar to shape of tulip. Bright green, turns yellow in autumn. Flower: Tulip-shaped, about 2 inches long, greenish yellow marked with orange. Stamens shorter than petals. Appear in spring with foliage. Sometimes concealed by foliage. Flowers when tree is 5-7 years old. Fruit: Two to three inches long, cone-shaped aggregate, very conspicuous after foliage has dropped in late autumn. Break up into one-seeded, winged fruit (samara). Branches: High, aspiring branches. Flattened, duckbill-shaped buds. Ash-gray bark. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Yellow autumn color Pyramidal form Clean shade tree Coarse texture Park, street and lawn tree Native of the region Remarks: 1. Does not transplant readily in large sizes, but its relatively fast rate of growth makes up for the difference in size. Aphids secrete objectionable sticky liquid. Very sensitive to a high water table such as found in New Orleans. Fertilize annually in late winter for accelerated growth with high nitrogen fertilizer in the root zone. Wood somewhat brittle in young, fast growing specimens. State tree of Tennessee. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape 34 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Bullbay (Southern) Magnolia BOTANICAL NAME: Magnolia grandiflora Native from North Carolina to Florida and Texas. Climax species grows in association with beech, oaks, and other hardwoods. Thrives in loose, moist, fertile, acid soil and in full sun to partial shade. Sparse flowering in shade. Very sensitive to depth of planting and heavy, compacted soils. Specimens appear stunted in poor soils. Medium-slow growth rate. Growth rate can be accelerated with annual application of high nitrogen analysis fertilizer. Dense, upright, pyramidal form in sun for 15 to 20 years. Loose, open density in shade. Coarse texture. Foliage: Alternate, simple, four to eight inches long, oval-oblong tapering both ways. Stiff, leathery, shiny green above and rusty tomentose beneath. Stout, green twigs. Flower: Large, white, 7-8 inches across with 6-12 waxy, fragile petals; filaments purple, carpellary cone prominent. April to June with occasional flowers earlier and later. Highly fragrant. Does not bloom until tree growth slows. Usually around 7 years. Fruit: Conelike, cylindric, three to four inches long, purplish, turning rusty brown with bright red, shiny seeds hanging from a filament-like thread when mature. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Evergreen, dense foliage Positive form Coarse texture Summer flowering Rusty color on underside of foliage Salt tolerant New selections bloom early Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. Form changes as tree grows from juvenile to mature size. Dense shade--usually requires a grass substitute beneath canopy. Blooms sooner and more profusely if roots are confined. Cultivars: ‘Majestic Beauty’--Extra large flowers, pyramidal form. ‘St. Mary’--Slow growing, compact form, bronze in color. ‘Samuel Sommer’--Large, fragrant flowers to 14 inches; leaves to 10 inches or more. Reported to be the best in cultivation. ‘Russet’--Compact, dense foliage and branches, leaves russet-brown beneath. Magnolias are relatively high maintenance trees because they drop foliage periodically throughout the year. 5. Nursery/Landscape 35 6/27/2017 Nursery/Landscape 36 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Chinese (Saucer) Magnolia BOTANICAL NAME: Magnolia x soulangiana A hybrid of Magnolia quinquepeta and Magnolia heptapeta. Widely grown in the South. Considered a favorite small tree. Medium growth rate. Performs best in full sunlight and a loose, loamy soil with a pH of 5.0 to 6.5. Propagated by seeds, cuttings, and grafting. Upright, oval form with upright branching, medium texture and dense when in foliage; open in winter when trunks, branches, and twigs are outstanding features. Foliage: Alternate, simple, entire, four to seven inches long. Broad ovate to obovate to broad-oblong and abruptly short pointed. Sometimes turning yellow in late autumn. Flower: Open saucer-shaped four to six inches across, purplish or rose on the outside with a creamy white center. Blooms in late winter and early spring before foliage. Fruit: Two and one-half to 3 inches long, ovoid or nearly globular. Knobby, rosecolored. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Flowers in late winter and early spring Smooth gray multi-trunked character Interesting large flower buds in winter Large, fuzzy winter buds Remarks: 1. 2. Highly fragrant flowers Soulangiana cultivars: ‘Alba’--White with pink shading at base ‘Alexandrina’--Large, fleshy pale pink. ‘Rubra’--(M. rustica rubra)--Rose-red. Blossoms open during mild winter days but subject to frost damage. Large, showy, fuzzy buds in winter. 3. 4. Nursery/Landscape 37 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Flowering Crabapple BOTANICAL NAME: Malus species and cv. Native from Virginia to Florida, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Widely distributed along small stream bottoms and woodland edges where soil is moist. Tolerant of most soil conditions and full sun to partial shade. Medium growth rate after becomes established. Rapid growth as seedling or root sprout. Propagate by seeds and root sprouts. Broad, mounding form with crooked, irregular branching. Medium texture and density. Foliage: Alternate, simple, 1-1/2 inches long, 1/2 to 3/4 inches wide. Elliptic to oblongobovate, apex rounded or acute, base cuneate. Dull green above, light green below. Margin crenately serrate. Toothed leaves occur on shoots of rapid growth and summer branches with zigzag stems. Branches charcoal colored. Flower: Pale to dark pink, one inch across, three to five in a cluster. Early spring before and with the foliage. Flower buds are much darker color than open flowers. Fragrant. Fruit: Three-fourths to one inch in diameter, flattened at ends. Shallow cavities. Yellow-green. Maturing in fall. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Woodland edges Small flowering tree Usually multi-trunked Native tree Wildlife food Remarks: 1. 2. 3. Edible fruit for making jelly and preserves. Root suckers usually abundant, forming thickets in native habitat. Leaf spot (rust fungus) usually defoliates trees prematurely in late summer, especially following prolonged rainy periods. Performance as cultivated tree is unpredictable and tree is short-lived. Young root sprouts maintain the population in native habitat. 4. Nursery/Landscape 38 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Heavenly Bamboo BOTANICAL NAME: Nandina domestica Native of China and Japan. Widely used over the entire southern region. Medium growth rate. Best in fertile, moist soil in full sun to partial shade. Tolerant of most conditions. Upright, oval form with foliage at top of stiff stems. Medium density. Fine texture. Foliage: Bipinnately and tripinnately compound, one to five leaflets one to two inches long, alternate, entire. Young growth tinged with red, turning bright red in winter. Flower: White, small, in terminal panicles. Sepals and petals shed and expose stamens. Blooms in late April. Fruit: Bright red berries, 1/4 inch across, in terminal clusters. Autumn and winter. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Erect form with multiple stems Red berries in autumn and winter Red winter foliage White flowers Slightly salt tolerant Fine texture New foliage copper colored Grows well in containers Remarks: 1. 2. For red foliage color, locate plants in sunny, exposed locations. Remove one-third of tallest canes each year to keep planting dense and compact. Make cuts near ground level in late winter. Available in smaller, more compact selections. These include: ‘Compacta’ which grows to approximately 30 to 36 inches, ‘Nana’ which is somewhat smaller at around 12 to 18 inches, ‘Pygmaea’ at less than 15 inches, ‘Harbour Dwarf’ - low-growing, dense form, popular because of dense compact mass. Tolerates considerable shade where form will be upright and open. Considerable seeding variation in foliage size and glossiness. One of the most durable plants available for a single clump or heavy mass. Miniature forms are prone to mildew, a disease which requires frequent spraying, especially in the lower South. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Nursery/Landscape 39 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Photinia BOTANICAL NAME: Photinia glabra Native of Japan. A highly popular large evergreen shrub in the region. Especially well adapted for the upper South. Performs best in a loose, moist sand, well-drained soil and full sunlight for best leaf coloration. Medium growth rate. Propagated by seeds and cuttings. Upright, oval form. Medium texture. Medium density. Soft natural growth if not harshly pruned. Foliage: Alternate, obovate, elliptic or oblong-obovate, cuneate at the base, acuminate, serrulate. Two to three and 1/2 inches long. Petioles approximately 1/2 inch long. New growth bright red, turning green after several weeks. Flower: Three - five inch panicles of white flowers in early spring. Somewhat prominent. Fruit: Red. Subglobose, berrylike pome in summer. Sometimes not prominent. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Screening mass Red color on new growth Large, evergreen shrub Hedge Remarks: 1. 2. New foliage following pruning is red regardless of season. Root fungus and fire blight are severe problems with the red leaf photinias in the lower South. Questionable as to what extent they should be used. Requires full sunlight to have intense red foliage. Relatively easy to keep plant within a given area by pruning. Loose, well-drained soil is essential. Plant is sensitive to heavy, poorly drained soils. Do not plant unless have near-perfect drainage conditions. Highly popular shrub in the trade because of the outstanding foliage color, especially at the time of new growth in early spring. Should be fertilized sparingly in late winter or early spring. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Nursery/Landscape 40 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Loblolly Pine BOTANICAL NAME: Pinus taeda Native from New Jersey to Texas. Rapidly invades idle fields, hence it is frequently called Old Field Pine, not found growing naturally on coastal plains and on the lower Piedmont Plateau. Fast rate of growth; prefers sun. Propagated by seed. Broad oval form with irregular horizontal branching, medium texture, and medium density. Foliage: Leaves in three's (rarely two), slender, six to nine inches long. Dull green. Flower: Yellow pollen cone in March. Buds: Smooth brown terminal buds about 1/2 inch in diameter. Fruit: Brown cone, two to six inches long, oblong-cylindrical to ovoid or conic, prickly at the top of each cone scale. Each scale thickened at apex. Bark: Divided into broad, thick ridges by deep furrows. Twigs reddish-brown. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. Evergreen tree Medium texture Fast rate of growth Remarks: 1. Loblolly Pine and Slash Pine are similar in overall form and character. West of Mississippi use Loblolly; east of Mississippi use Loblolly and Slash Pine. Slash Pine grows fastest for first 20 years, then Loblolly Pine is fastest of the southern Pines. Grows well in poor soils. Fusiform rust is a serious disease for which there is no control; pine tip moth and colaspis beetle are two insect pests. Excellent high shade for many understory trees and shrubs. 2. 3. 4. 5. Nursery/Landscape 41 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Japanese Yew BOTANICAL NAME: Podocarpus macrophyllus Native of Japan. Highly popular evergreen shrub in the lower South and on the West Coast. Often used as container plant in the North and East. Relatively slow growth rate. Performs best in full sunlight to partial shade and in a loose, fertile, well-drained soil. Propagated by seeds and cuttings. Narrow, upright, columnar form with horizontally spreading branches and somewhat pendant branchlets. Fine texture, very dense mass. Old specimens maybe pruned into small evergreen tree. Foliage: Simple, alternate, narrowly lanceolate, narrows toward apex, and acute or obtuse at base, gradually narrows into short petiole. Three to four inches long, more than 1/3 inch wide, with distinct midrib above. Lustrous dark green above, paler below. Flower: Yellow catkin-like make flowers and greenish inconspicuous female flowers. Fruit: Oval-shaped fleshy, purple-violet berry, 1/2 inch long on female plants. Edible. Landscape Value: 1. 2. 3. 4. Upright form Fine texture Evergreen shrub or small tree Screening mass Remarks: 1. 2. Can be heavily clipped, although natural form is usually preferred. Cultivar ‘Maki’ has small leaves and is shrub-like. Excellent gray-green color on new growth. Subject to root rot fungus in wet soils. Very sensitive to heavy, poorly drained clay soils. Reported to be slightly salt tolerant. Better than average soil preparation necessary for good performance. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape 42 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Thundercloud Flowering Plum BOTANICAL NAME: Prunus cerasifera ‘Thundercloud’ Native of southwest Asia. Medium to fast rate of growth. Best in full sun and well-drained soil. Upright, oval form with dense, ascending branches. Propagated by cuttings and seeds. Foliage: Alternate, elliptic to ovate, finely serrate. Dark purple, bleaching in the summer. Young stems purple. Lenticels on stems.Flower: Delicate pink-white in spring before foliage. Fragrant flowers. Fruit: Drupe to one inch diameter. Matures late summer. Not of major ornamental value. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Distinctive foliage color Spring flowers Small deciduous tree Accent Remarks: 1. 2. 3. Will not retain purple color in dense shade. Short-lived tree, especially in the extreme South. Several pests but borers and scale are the most serious and often kill the tree. Single and double flowering selections available in the trade. Sun bleaches purple foliage in fully exposed locations in lower south. Better color results if protection is given from hot afternoon sun. Some of the common cultivars: ‘Atropurpurea’--Popular in the trade. Large leaves, pink flowers, dense upright branches. ‘Hollywood’--Leaves first appear as green then turn deep purple. ‘Thundercloud’--Reported best. Retains purple color for lengthy period. Flowering occurs after tree is 3-5 years old and growth has tapered off. Highly visible tree in any planting. Effective tucked into planting of neutral green foliages. Provides strong contrasts in landscape setting. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape 43 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Firethorn BOTANICAL NAME: Pyracantha coccinea Native of southern Europe and western Asia. Widely planted in the South. Medium-fast growth rate. Thrives in full sun on fertile, well-drained, acid to strongly alkaline (pH 5.5-7.5) soil. Propagate by seeds or cuttings of ripened wood in fall. Not easy to transplant, especially large sizes. Upright, spreading form with heavy horizontal branches, lateral twigs on stout spreading basal branches. Fine texture, medium density. Foliage: Alternate, simple, oval-oblong to oblanceolate, 3/4 to one and 3/4 inches long, acute, toothed. Glabrous or slightly pubescent when young. Branches with numerous short spines. Young branchlets and petioles grayish pubescent. Flower: Small, white in corymbs to two inches across. Spring blooms. Somewhat prominent. Fruit: Bright, orange-red, round apple-like berries, 1/4 inch in diameter. Clusters of fruit very conspicuous. Persistent in fall, winter through early spring. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Very valuable for seasonal interest Fine texture Espalier on walls and other flat surfaces Screening mass Wildlife food Remarks: 1. Pyracantha koidzumii may be equally as important in the trade. It has flattened red berried, entire leaf margins, and an upright spreading form with heavy horizontal branches. ‘Victory’ and ‘Santa Cruz’ are popular cultivars. Berries are produced on two-year wood. Keep some of previous season's wood when pruning in late winter. Cannot tolerate severe pruning. Selectively thin to maintain a restricted area. Fireblight is severe disease problem on old specimens. Relatively shortlived. Train into espalier by removing all branches which grow out of desired form. Major cultivars include: ‘Lalandei’--orange-red berried, likely the most popular; ‘Lowboy’--low, broad spreading; ‘Pauciflora’--very hardy, orange berries; ‘Aurea’--yellow berries; ‘Kasan’--orange-red berries; ‘Monrovia’--excellent fruiting. White fly, scale, aphids, spider mites and sooty mold are major pests. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape 44 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Bradford Pear BOTANICAL NAME: Pyrus calleryana ‘Bradford’ Medium to fast rate of growth. Prefers sun. Provide fertile, well-drained soil. Columnar when young, becoming more oval with age. Becoming very popular in South. Foliage: Alternate, simple, oval to oblong-ovate two to four inches long, new leaves coppery, quickly turning bright green. Heavy, glossy, purple autumn color. Flower: White, one inch across appearing with new foliage in the spring. Lasts for a very short time--one week to 10 days. Fruit: One-half inch in diameter and are not a nuisance in well-maintained landscape plantings as are those of the Pyrus communis. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. White flowers in spring Erect form Fruit attractive to wildlife Small, urban sites Sidewalk tree Deciduous tree Remarks: 1. 2. Not as susceptible to fireblight as is the Common Pear. A selected form of Callery Pear, suitable for the South. Blight resistant and more upright form than other selections. More desirable than callery seedlings, most of which have prominent spines. Nursery/Landscape 45 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Shumard Oak BOTANICAL NAME: Quercus shumardii Native of the southern United States, widely distributed in Louisiana in well-drained locations, but not abundant. Found on deep, rich, bottomland soils along streams and swamp borders; usually occurring as an occasional tree in mixed hardwood forests. Medium rate of growth, prefers full sun and well-drained soils. Propagated by seeds. Upright oval form when young, rounded when old. Coarse texture and dense. Foliage: Alternate, simple six to eight inches long by three to four inches wide, obovate, seven to nine lobed, lobes broadest at apex, teeth bristle-tipped, turning red in fall. Sinuses between lobes variable, narrow to broad. Uniform lobing. Flower: Staminate, drooping catkins and pistillate flowers in many-flowered spikes; conspicuous yellow-green to brown in spring. Fruit: Acorn is 3/4 to one inch long, 3/4 inch in diameter, cup saucer to shallow cup shaped enclosing one-third of nut; nut broadest at base with tapering sides and rounded apex. Requires two years to mature. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Excellent large shade tree Very dependable red autumn color for the lower South. Oval form Glossy foliage Remarks: 1. 2. Annual applications of fertilizer encourages rapid growth. Distinguished from Southern Red Oak by more uniform lobing and absence of dense pubescence on undersurface. Nursery/Landscape 46 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Live Oak BOTANICAL NAME: Quercus virginiana Native from Virginia to Florida and Mexico. Most popular oak in deep South. Medium-fast growth rate for first 10 years, then slow. Best in full sunlight. Tolerant of wide range of soil conditions. Does best in a moist, fertile soil. To hasten growth, prune, water, and fertilize regularly. Short thick trunk and broad-spreading, mounding form at maturity with almost horizontal branches growing near the ground. Medium-fine texture. Medium density. Foliage: Alternate, simple elliptic or oblong, 1 /2 to five inches long. Leathery, dark glossy, blue-green above, gray pubescent below. Margins of spring leaves are entire and occasionally revolute; summer growth is usually sparsely toothed. Often hollylike. Fruit: Acorns in clusters of one to five on peduncles 1/2 to three inches long; acorn is 1/2 inches long and 1/3 inch in diameter. Seedling volunteers abundant, especially in loose, moist soil. Trunk: Bark is thick dark and divided into broad, heavy ridges by deep narrow furrows. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Broad-spreading form Long-lived tree Large evergreen Easily transplanted in large sizes Salt spray tolerant Remarks: 1. 2. Dieback is a problem in old trees growing under stress. Growth rate can be accelerated by annual applications of fertilizer and supplementary watering during summer. Apply 1/2 to 2 pounds of complete fertilizer (10-10-10) per year of age of tree in late winter. Natural form of tree is best if specimens are allowed to grow in large open spaces. Less successful as a street tree in some cases. Considerable seedling variation. Some are nearly deciduous in late winter. Yellow-green of catkins is a striking feature in early spring. Dwarf live oak (Quercus minima) is indigenous to pine flatwoods and deep sands behind beach sites. This oak is associated with burned woodlands and is only oak found on regularly burned sites. Height is under 6 feet. Evergreen leaves are 2-5 inches long and variable in shape. Twigs are reddish colored. 3. 4. 5. 6. Nursery/Landscape 47 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Indian Hawthorn BOTANICAL NAME: Raphiolepis indica A native of China, raphiolepis has become a highly versatile, widely planted intermediate sized shrub. It performs well in a moist, fertile, well-drained soil and grows best in positions which receive direct morning sunlight. The form is dense-mounding to irregular, depending on the cultivar. Some are very compact and low growing, others open, tall and rangy. Plants have thick, stiff branches with medium textured foliage. Moderate growth rate. Foliage: Oblong-lanceolate leaves, each to three inches long, bluntly toothed. Dark green and leathery. More dense near tips of branches. Flower: Flowers about one-half inch across in clusters with slight variations with each cultivar. Profuse blooming in midspring. White to dark rosy-pink. Blooms intermittently through summer and fall. Fruit: Prominent berries to one-fourth inch in diameter. Green turning purple in late autumn. Normally borne in clusters. Landscape Values: Remarks: Nursery/Landscape 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Low to medium sized shrub Flowers - white to dark rosy-pink Purple to black fruit New foliage copper colored Massed as ground covers 1. Performance is unpredictable. Apparently the most important considerations for good growth are adequate drainage, proper soil preparation, several hours of direct sunlight each day, and good air circulation. 2. Cercospora leaf spot, a serious disease of some cultivars, but will be less severe if plants are protected from heavy dews and provided with about six hours of direct sunlight each day. 3. Relatively easy to keep size restricted by selective pruning after flowering. 4. Reported to be tolerant of salt spray. 5. Many cultivars listed in the trade. Some of the most popular include the following: ‘Ballerina’ -- Mostly dwarf, normally under two feet, dark pink flowers ‘Pink Cloud’ -- Medium height, to three feet, light pink flowers ‘Jack Evans’ -- Compact, broad spreading, double pink flowers ‘Enchantress’ -- Large rosy-pink flowers, compact growth, to three feet ‘Springtime’ -- Moderately fast growth to four feet in height ‘Clara’ -- White, Maintains low dense form for several years. Excellent foliage ‘Janice’ -- Dwarf, pink ‘Peggy’ -- White, compact growth 6. R. umbellata -- Yeddo hawthorn is very similar and was once more common than R. indica. Leaves are thicker broader and more rounded but general landscape values about the same as the large growing Indian hawthorn selections. 48 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Hybrid Tea Rose BOTANICAL NAME: Rosa x cv. A group of widely planted shrubs used primarily for seasonal color. Essential to provide full sunlight an a raised bed with loose, fertile, well-drained soil. Plant new roses in winter. Prune established roses in late January. Fast growth. Open density. Medium texture. Foliage: Alternate, Glossy. Compound, three to five leaflets. Flower: Solitary or in clusters from early spring to frost. Many colors. Blooms on new wood. When cutting and pruning, cut back to a five-leaflet leaf. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Remarks: Very strict spraying schedule and annual pruning required for good performance. Color--spring through fall Cut flower Bedding plant--color display Enrichment Rose Classifications: 1. Hybrid Teas: Large pointed buds, long stems, specimen blooms borne singly or in clusters of three to five blooms per stem. 2. Floribundas: Medium-sized bloom, flat-topped clusters. Color display. Profuse bloomer. Shorter stems than hybrid teas. Abundance of flowers. 3. Polyanthas: Large flower cluster but each flower in cluster is smaller than floribunda. Clusters tend to be cone-shaped. Seed primarily in mass plantings for color accent over extended period. 4. Grandiflora: Most recent introduction. Combines good qualities of hybrid teas and floribundas. Long stemmed flower in small clusters. Individual flowers are medium large. 5. Climbers and Ramblers: This type possesses great vigor and produces long canes. Needs support. Many variations in climbers. 6. Miniatures: Specialty rose group. Usually grow only 12 to 15 inches high. 7. Tree roses: Not a specific type; refers to horticultural treatment. Roses are highly specialized. Each type requires special cultural practices to produce quality flowers. A reference on roses should be consulted before making a major investment in this plant. Nursery/Landscape 49 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Bridal-Wreath BOTANICAL NAME: Spirea prunifolia Native of Korea and China. Medium rate of growth. Performs best in full sunlight and moist, well-drained soil. Grows well in partial shade, but flowering is sparse. Slender, upright, vase form with many stems arising from central crown forming dense clump. Fine texture. Foliage: Glabrous or pubescent beneath, dark glossy green above. Elliptic to oblong, pointed at both ends, 1 inch long. Finely toothed. Sometimes red or yellow autumn color. Flower: Double white, blooming in early spring before leaves. Thickly set in clusters along branches. Button-like. Especially showy in cooler sections of the country. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Spring bloom Fine texture Ease of culture Upright, vase form Relatively long-lived Remarks: 1. 2. Does not perform as well in the extreme South as it does in upper South. Thin out old, nonproductive canes at or near ground level. Remove onethird of the tallest canes each year to encourage denser growth and better flowering. Never destroy natural form by shearing across the top. Bridal wreath begins flowering soon after Spiraea thunbergii (baby's breath spirea). It blooms soon after most of the early azaleas. Best autumn color of all the spireas. The upright form of this spirea is somewhat more positive than the other spireas and may be more difficult to combine with other shrubs. All spireas are relatively free of most insect and disease pests. Leaf spot fungus and powdery mildew are problems sometimes. Among the easiest shrubs to grow because of their tolerance to wide range of conditions. They require less maintenance than most other shrubs and are long-lived. Spireas should be fertilized in late winter just before new growth begins using a complete fertilizer such as an 8-8-8, or similar, at the rate of approximately 1/4 pound (one cup) of fertilizer per well-established plant. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape 50 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Bald Cypress BOTANICAL NAME: Taxodium distichum Native of North America; at one time the chief lumber tree of the Mississippi River Floodplain. Widely distributed in Louisiana as a native and in cultivated state. Fast rate of growth for first seven to 10 years, then slow. Grows well in highlands and in water. Conical form with horizontal branching. Fine texture. Medium dense. Foliage: Alternate, leaves usually spreading in a flat plane on the sides of branchlets, feather-like, each leaf 1/2-3/4 inches long by 1/16 inches wide. Emerald-green in spring, rust-brown in fall. Branches right angle to trunk. Flower: Purplish pollen-producing cones in long drooping clusters. Conspicuous after branchlets have shed. Fruit: Seed bearing cone globose, roughened, about one inch in diameter. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Form Ability to grow in we and dry soils Fine texture Foliage color--spring and autumn Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Only deciduous conifer State tree of Louisiana May have knees when growing in wet areas Very durable wood Taxodium ascendens, Pond Cypress is more upright and has imbricated leaves. Several new horticulture forms but not readily available in trade. When old, tops have nearly horizontal branches. Nursery/Landscape 51 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Asian Jasmine BOTANICAL NAME: Trachelospermum asiaticum Native of China. Fast growth rate. Does well in sun and shade. Propagate by layering or cuttings. Foliage: Opposite, simple, entire, elliptic or obovate, 1-1/2 inches long. Glossy, dark green. Slender wiry stems. Landscape Values: 1. 2. Ground cover Evergreen vine Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Variegated form T. asiaticum variegatum is popular for landscape developments. For rapid ground cover, cover bed with two or three inches of pine bark. Shear every second or third year if lower mat covering is preferred. Weeds and grasses are not a major problem once surface is covered. Difficult to use with small mounding shrubs, bulbs, and other inter-plantings because of the rank, competitive growth. This species does not flower. To introduce fragrance into planting, one Star Jasmine may be added for every 15 to 20 of the dwarf ground cover type. In colder regions, foliage turns a dark reddish-purple after first major frost. 6. 7. Nursery/Landscape 52 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Windmill Palm BOTANICAL NAME: Trachycarpus fortunei Native of eastern Asia, very hardy, from North Carolina south on the east and from Oregon south on the Pacific Coast. Slow growing palm. Grows best in full sun. Propagated by seeds. Erect form with dense head on a slender trunk with umbrella-like branching, coarse texture, and dense foliage mass. Foliage: Fan-shaped nearly orbicular, three feet or more across, palmately compound, leaves divided into stiff segments, drooping on mature blades, dull dark green; smooth petioles. Flower: Long clusters of yellow flowers 1/2-3/4 inches long, from spring to fall. Fruit: Small, bluish, three-carpelled and deeply angled, pea-like fruits after flowers, in clusters. Trunk: Covered with dark brown coarse hair-like or burlap-like fiber. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. Coarse texture Columnar trunk Flowers of mature specimens Tub specimen Remarks: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Expensive in large sizes because of slow growth. Columnar trunk Hardy Palm in areas where cold temperatures may damage other palms. Not easily obtained in large sizes. Trunk is covered with burlap-like fiber and constricted at base. Performs badly in heavy, poorly drained soils. Grows well along coast; tolerant of light salt spray. Nursery/Landscape 53 6/27/2017 COMMON NAME: Chinese Wisteria BOTANICAL NAME: Wisteria sinensis Native of China. Thrives in moist, fertile soil, and full sunlight to partial shade but quite tolerant of most conditions. Not easy to confine. Very fast growth. Propagate by seeds or cuttings of an old, mature, blooming plant. Provide sturdy support. A woody vine, with twining branches, medium texture, and dense growth. Foliage: Pinnately compound, alternate, 7-13 leaflets, usually 11. Ovate-acuminate or ovatelanceolate, short-stalked, 2-3 in. long. Silky with appressed hairs when young. Flower: Blue-violet, pea-like, one inch long, in pendulous clusters six to 12 inches long. Blooms in spring with a few scattered through the summer. Fruit: Flattened seed pod, elongated, two-valved, velvety, light brown. Landscape Values: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Profuse flowers before foliage Vigorous growth Can form a tree or standard specimen by careful pruning. Pendulous character of flowers. Fragrant Trunk character Remarks: 1. Stimulate flowering by withholding fertilizer, water and by root pruning. Flowering is sparse when vines are actively growing. Requires frequent pruning to restrict size. Vigorous growth can kill trees by strangulation or shading Heavy growth may damage wood and painted surfaces. Bloom delayed for 5+ years if started from seed or nonflowering wood. Purchased plants need at least one flower present to ensure age. Cultivars available in the trade. ‘Alba’--white flowers ‘Caroline’--lavender flowers Wisteria floribunda--Japanese wisteria has very prominent flowering racemes to 20 in. or more. Pinnately compound leaves with 13 to 19 leaflets. Colors available in the trade include white, pink, and purple. 2. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. Nursery/Landscape 54 6/27/2017