Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Plant ID Group #9 Horticulture 2 Picea abies • Norway Spruce – Foliage: evergreen shrub with simple, needle-like shape, slightly curved; needles that persist for 3 to 4 years; needles are stiff and pointed, 0.5" to 1" long; needles tend to point downwards and towards the stem tip; medium green in color – Height: 40-60 feet – Width: 30-35 feet – Form: conical – Leaf Arrangement: whorled – Landscape Use: border, foundation, specimen – Exposure: sun Pieris japonica • Japanese Andromeda – Foliage: evergreen shrub with simple, linear shape leaves with serrulate margins – Flowers: white in pendulous panicles in spring; graceful – Height: 5-6 feet – Form: 4-6 feet – Leaf Arrangement: alternate – Landscape Use: border, foundation, hedge – Exposure: part shade to shade Pinus mugo var mugo • Mugo Pine – Foliage: dark green, 1 - 1 1/2 inches long, stiff needles of this two-needle Pine are held on the tree for more than four years making this one of the more dense Pines suitable for a screen planting – Flowers: 1-2 inch pine cone – Height: 4 to 10 feet – Form: shrub or small, round or broad pyramidal plant – Leaf Arrangement: Alternate – Landscape Use: border, foundation, specimen – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristics: expensive, slow growing and virtually maintenance free; good for rock gardens Pinus strobus • Eastern White Pine – Foliage: soft, flexible, blue-green; 2"-4" long, 3-sided, in bundles of five. Evergreen – Flowers: Cones slender and thornless, 3"-10" long and tapering; each scale usually bears two winged seeds as do all native pines – Height: 80'-110' – Spread: 20'-40' – Form: pyramidal tree – Landscape Use: border, screen, specimen – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristic: Not native to Eastern NC Platanus x acerifolia • London Plane Tree – Foliage: simple, lobed, star shaped; deciduous; – Flowers: red and inconspicuous and not showy; spring flowering – Height: 85 feet – Width: 70 feet – Form: symmetrical canopy with a regular outline, and individuals have more or less identical crown forms – Leaf Arrangement: alternate – Landscape Use: shade, parking lot beds – Exposure: sun Plectranthus australis • Swedish Ivy – Foliage: rounded, glossy, dark green 1-1½" long, scalloped margins – Flowers: whorled, tubular, pale mauve to white flowers in terminal racemes – Height: stems trailing to 3' – Form: weeping and creeping – Exposure: partial shade – Landscape Use: container, hanging baskets – Unique Characteristic: orange dye in stems Prunus laurocerasus 'Zabeliana' • Zabel Cherry Laurel – Foliage: evergreen shrub with simple, elliptic leaves with entire margins – Flowers: white, fragrant, bloom in May – Height: 3-4 feet – Width: 8-10 feet – Leaf Arrangement: alternate – Landscape Use: border, foundation – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristics: purplish drupe for fruit Prunus serrulata ‘Kwanzan’ – Japanese Flowering Cherry – Foliage: deciduous tree with simple, elliptic shape with serrated margins – Flowers: deep pink, double in spring – Height: 20-25 feet – Spread: 15-20 feet – Form: branches grow upward – Leaf Arrangement: alternating – Landscape Use: border, specimen – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristic: used for blooms and fall color Pyracantha coccinea • Scarlet Firethorn – Foliage: Evergreen broadleaf; foliage is glossy, dark green; glossy green leaves are slender, growing from just ½- to 1-inch wide and 1 to 4 inches long – Flowers: Showy, small white flowers bloom in spring followed by bright orange berries in the fall – Height: 2-10 feet – Width: 12-14 feet – Form: shrub that spreads – Landscape Use: border, hedge, foundation, specimen plant, and barrier – Exposure: part shade to full sun – Unique Characteristics: fierce thorns Pyrus calleryana ‘Bradford’ • Bradford Pear – Foliage: deciduous tree with simple ovate leaves and serrated margins – Flowers: white, five petals on flowers in spring before leaves appear; green/brown pomes appear after flowers – Height: 20-35 feet – Spread:15-20 feet – Form: oval; formal symmetrical habit – Leaf Arrangement: alternate – Landscape Use: border, specimen – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristic: stink, break easily in storms, bad leaf litter Quercus falcata • Southern Red Oak – Foliage: deciduous tree with simple, obovate outline with 3-7 bristle tipped lobes – Flowers: catkins, acorns – Height: 50-60 feet – Width: 50-60 feet – Form: tall tree – Leaf Arrangement: alternate – Landscape Use: border, shade tree, specimen – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristics: holds dead leaves for a while during the winter. Quercus nigra • Water Oak – Foliage: deciduous tree with simple, obovate shape with 2 lobed entire margins – Flowers: catkins, acorns – Height: 40-70 feet – Width: 45-60 feet – Form: tall tree – Leaf Arrangement: alternate – Landscape Use: border, shade tree, specimen – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristics: most commonly used oak for street plantings and shade Quercus palustris • Pin Oak – Foliage: simple, 5-7 narrow lobes with bristle tips; deciduous; 3-6 inches long – Flowers: tiny yellow catkins – Height: 40- 75 feet – Spread: 25- 40 feet – Form: pyramidal shape when young; oval to gumdrop-shape when older – Leaf Arrangement: alternating – Exposure: sun – Landscape Use: border, shape, specimen – Unique Characteristic: ½” light brown acorn Catkin • NOT FROM PIN OAK Quercus phellos • Willow Oak – Foliage: deciduous; 2 to 5.5" alternate, narrow, simple lanceolate shaped leaves; slightly wavy; yellow to yellow brown fall color – Flowers: .5" acorn – Height: 60 to 80' – Spread: 35 to 50’ – Form: Conical in youth; rounded crown; dense – Leaf Arrangement: alternating – Exposure: sun – Landscape Use: border, shade, specimen Raphiolepis indica • Indian Hawthorn – Foliage: low-growing evergreen flowering shrubs; leathery, dark evergreen leaves are rounded, about 2 to 3 inches long, turning purplish in winter – Flowers: fragrant, pink or white crabapple-like flowers open in clusters above the foliage in mid-April to May – Height: 3 to 6 feet – Width: 3 to 6 feet – Form: dense mounded growth habit – Leaf Arrangement: – Landscape Use: small gardens and foundation plantings – Exposure: sun – Unique Characteristics: rarely need pruning REVIEW