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Rusty Blackhaw Viburnum

Viburnum rufidulum

Photo by joanbstanley
Published on Project Noah
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31.1085, -97.4966

Field Notes

Description:

This viburnum is a shrub or tree, usually growing to 18 ft. but sometimes taller with bark separating into dark, rectangular plates. Twigs reddish brown with a thin light gray coating. Leaves in pairs, often on short spurs, the petioles covered with rust colored, branched hairs visible under a l0x hand lens; blades up to 3 1/2 inches long, elliptic to oval or Ovate (Shaped like an egg, with the narrow end at the apex.) tip rounded or with a broad point, base rounded or broadly wedge shaped, margins finely serrate, firm textured with a shiny upper surface. Glossy, dark-green, deciduous leaves turn a variety of warm hues in autumn. Flowers white, from 1/4 to 3/8 inch wide, in rounded or flattened clusters up to 4 inches wide, appearing in March and April and noticeable from a distance in early spring. Fruit fleshy, bluish black lightened by a waxy coating, up to 1/2 inch long, slightly longer than wide.

Habitat:

Several months ago the power company came through and heavily cut back the trees growing under the powerlines on the undeveloped lot right across the street from our house, exposing this Viburnum. I had no idea it was there until this spring, when it leafed out and bloomed.

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