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Atlantic ninebark

Physocarpus intermedius (Rydb.) C. K. Schneider

[=Physocarpus opulifolius (L.) Maxim. var. intermedius (Rydb.) B.L. Robinson ]

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Atlantic ninebark inflorescence
Atlantic ninebark flowering
Atlantic ninebark bark
Atlantic ninebark
Atlantic ninebark leaf
Atlantic ninebark leaf
Atlantic ninebark fruit

Morphology

Trunk
Stems spreading to ascending or erect; branches unarmed; bark brown to reddish brown, exfoliating in long, thin strips or papery sheets; wood tan, soft.
Twigs
Yellowish brown, flexible, glabrous; leaf scars shield-shaped; buds brown, ovoid, .1 to .16 inch, apex obtuse, scales sparsely to densely pubescent.
Leaves
Deciduous, alternate, simple; stipules caducous or more or less persistent, linear to narrowly ovate, .2 to .28 inch; petiole .4 to .8 inch, glabrous; blade ovate to obovate, 1.6 to 4.8 inches long, 2 to 3.6 inches wide, base cuneate to truncate or rounded, margins palmately 3- or 5-lobed, irregularly serrate, apex acute, lower surface light green, sparsely stellate-hairy, upper surface dark green, glabrous.
Flowers
Terminal on lateral branches of season, racemes, rounded, 10-30-flowered, .8 to 2.4 inches diam.; peduncles .4 to 2 inches, sparsely stellate-hairy, glabrate; bracts lanceolate to oblanceolate, .08 to .16 inch; pedicels .4 to .8 inch, usually stellate-hairy, sometimes glabrate. Flowersbisexual, radially symmetric; hypanthium shallowly cup-shaped, stellate-hairy; sepals 5, spreading, triangular, .1 to .12 inch; petals 5, white, round to elliptic, spreading to reflexed, .16 to .24 inch long and wide; stamens 20-40; pistils 3-5, connate to half their lengths, free from hypanthium, ovary superior, 1-locular; style 1 per pistil, glabrous; stigma 1 per style, capitate.
Fruit
June-July; follicles, brown, weakly connate at bases, ovoid, more or less inflated, stellate-hairy, .3 to .5 inch, styles persistent basally, spreading to ascending, .16 to .2 inch; seeds 1-2 per follicle, yellow to brown, obovoid, obliquely pear-shaped, .08 to .1 inch long, smooth, shiny.

Ecology

Habitat
Rocky banks, bluffs, stream banks, woodlands.
Distribution
Southeast corner of Kansas

Additional Notes

Comments

Physocarpus intermedius has been treated as a variety of Physocarpus opulifolius (L.) Maxim. Physocarpus opulifolius is distinguished by its glabrous follicles; it occurs mostly in the eastern United States and is widely cultivated as an ornamental shrub.

Synonyms

Alternative scientific names that have been used for this plant.

Scientific Name: Physocarpus opulifolius

Full Citation: Physocarpus opulifolius Maxim.


Subspecies/Varieties:

  • var. intermedius B.L. Robinson
Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Rosaceae - Rose Family
Height
Shrubs, to 10 feet
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2019-12-27
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: May, June