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Download Pittosporum – Images - San Diego Master Gardeners
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Presenting a shrubbery… or a small tree Pittosporum Pittosporaceae (taxonomic family) WL Emerson Master Gardener trainee 2016 What is this Pittosporum? • Family: Pittosporaceae • Genus: Pittosporum • Pronunciation: pit-tuss-SPOR-rum • Group: Dicots with over 200 species of flowering shrubs & evergreen trees • Slow, moderate, and fast growing “Cheesewoods” • White wood takes stain easily • Soft to hard woods • Once a preferred wood for golf clubs – P. undulatum • Trees – straight-trunked & cylindrical • Saponin – chemical in sap Common Use • Popular ornamentals • screen; hedge; border; mass planting; container or aboveground planter; trained as a standard Pittosporum tenuifolium 'Silver Sheen' hedge Origin - Gondwana • China, Nepal, & Japan • Australia & New Zealand – not native to North America • Availability: generally available in many areas within its hardiness range Planting Range USDA Hardiness Zones 8-11 USDA Hardiness Zones 8-11 Leaves • Leaves – Simple with entire or waved margin – Whorled or spirally arranged – Leathery – Glossy green or variegated white; some are red Margin: entire Margin: Wavy Entire Wavy Leaf pattern: whorled Pittosporum 'Tom Thumb' in Autumn Flowers • Fragrant creamy white, pink, yellow • Australian varieties – red, red-purple, purple • End of the stem & set in clusters • 5 sepals & 5 petals • Insect pollinated Kohuhu, p. tenuifolium Kohuhu, p. tenuifolium P. revolutum Karo, P. crassifolium Tarata or Lemonwood, p. eugenioides Fruit & Seeds • Fruit • woody seed capsule • bird dispersal Greek: • “pitta” = pitch + “spora” = seed • Seed covered with a sticky capsule • 80-90% propagation rate from seed • Germinate 8-12 weeks Pittosporum rubiginosum Weeping pittosporum ,P. angustifolium Queensland Hollywood, P. rhombifolium Lemonwood, P. eugeniodes Karo, P. crassifolium Salt Tolerant • Coastal gardeners – Ideal for areas with salt water conditions – Esp. Japanese pittosporum (P. tobira) – Grows in a variety of soils – sand to clay • Alkaline to acid – Up into sand dunes How to Grow Pittosporum • • • • • Sun to part shade (best in sun) Moderate moisture for fast growth Survives drought but looks terrible Very adaptable & grows in most soils Hates wet feet Weeping pittosporum IPM Notes • Scales • Aphids – Congregate along midrib on leaf underside • Sooty mold • Mealybugs, root nematodes, whiteflies Cottony Cushion Scale (Icerya purchasi) • Natural predators usually keep this insect in check • Control ants and dust which can give the scale a competitive advantage Colonized mock orange (Pittosporum tobira) in home landscape Predator: vedalia beetle Aphids on P. tobira Cottony cushion scale vedalia beetle, Rodalia cardinalis Other Problems Problem Cure Root rot Provide good drainage Leaf spot Water roots, avoid watering foliage Bacterial and Fungal Infections Stem galls Bark slough Stem discoloration Clean pruning equipment! Medicinal Australian Aboriginals used P. angustifolium • Topically - eczema, pruritis, arthritis • Tea - coughs, colds, or cramps • Warm compress of leaves help bring on milk in nursing mothers Why we love it • • • • • Frost hardy down to -8°C / 17°F Require minimal care Disease resistance is good Scented flowers – best at night Bees, birds, & butterflies love it The End