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Mountain Ninebark

Physocarpus monogynus (Torr.) Kuntze

Brief Summary

provided by EOL authors
Mountain Ninebark, also known as Rocky Mountain Ninebark (Physocarpus monogynous) is a flowering shrub in the Rosaceae family. Found across the American west (AZ, CO, MT, NM, NV, OK, SD, TX, UT, WY) on rocky, dry hillsides, P. monogynous grows from two to three feet high. Blooming in June and July as clusters of five-petaled white flowers, P. monogynous has hairy, short leaves that are palmately lobed and turn bright red in the fall. The name "ninebark" refers to the way it sheds its bark in multiple layers, revealing different shades of brown. As a landscape plant it grows best in shady areas, and can even be planted in full shade.

Comprehensive Description

provided by North American Flora
Opulaster monogynus (Torr.) Kuntze, Rev. Gen. 949. 1891
spiraea monogyna Torr. Ann. I^yc. N. Y. 2: 194. 1827.
Icotorus monianus Raf. Bull. Bot. Seringe 216. 1830.
Epicosiorus montanus Raf. Atl. Jour. 1 : 144. 1832.
Spiraea opulifolia pauciflora T. & G. Fl. N. Am. 1 : 414, in part. 1840.
Spiraea opulifolia parviflora Porter & Coult. Syn. Fl. Colo. 33. 1874.
Neillia Torreyi S. Wats. Proc. Am. Acad. 11 : 136. 1876.
Physocarpus Torreyi Maxim. Acta Hort. Petrop. 6 : 221. 1879.
Neillia monogyna Greene, Pittonia 2 : 29. 1889.
Physocarpus monogynus Coult. Contr. U. S. Nat. Herb. 2 : 104. 1891.
A shrub, usually less than 1 m. high, with usually decumbent stems ; branches brownish, glabrous or sparingly stellate; petioles 1 cm. long or less; leaf-blades 1-3 cm., roundedovate to reniform in outline, usually rather deeply 3-5-lobed, incised ; glabrous or nearly so and green on both sides ; corymb rather few-flowered ; bracts lanceolate and caducous ; pedicels 1-1.5 cm. long, usually sparingly stellate ; hypanthium about 3 mm. wide, stellate ; sepals lance-ovate to elliptic, usually obtuse, densely stellate on both sides ; petals white, orbicular, about 3 mm. long; follicles 2 (rarely 3), united to above the middle, densely stellate, 3-4 mm. long with ascendingspreading beaks; seeds obliquely pear-shaped, over 1.5 mm. long.
Type locality : Rocky Mountains [Colorado] .
Distribution : High mountains, from the Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming to Texas and New Mexico ; also Nevada.
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bibliographic citation
Frederick Vernon Coville, Nathaniel Lord Britton, Henry Allan Gleason, John Kunkel Small, Charles Louis Pollard, Per Axel Rydberg. 1908. GROSSULARIACEAE, PLATANACEAE, CROSSOSOMATACEAE, CONNARACEAE, CALYCANTHACEAE, and ROSACEAE (pars). North American flora. vol 22(3). New York Botanical Garden, New York, NY
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North American Flora

Physocarpus monogynus

provided by wikipedia EN

Physocarpus monogynus, the mountain ninebark or low ninebark, is a flowering shrub of western North America.

Distribution

Physocarpus monogynus occurs from northern Mexico and west Texas north to Montana and South Dakota and west to Nevada (Elmore 1976, USDA 2008). It grows on slopes, shaded by being in canyons or facing north, at altitudes of 1,700 to 3,000 meters (5,500 to 10,000 feet). The typical habitat, at least in the southern part of its range, is dominated by ponderosa pine and scrub oak (Elmore 1976).

Description

Main stem with peeling bark

The Physocarpus monogynus plant reaches 1.2 meters (4 feet) in height and somewhat more in width. The leaves are dull green above and paler below, with 3 to 5 doubly toothed lobes, so they suggest big currant (Ribes) leaves. The bark is brownish and shreds, revealing many layers, hence the name "ninebark" (Elmore 1976).

In May or June, mountain ninebark bears "rather lovely" white or rose-colored flowers, with five petals based in a cup-like structure. The flowers have one style, the meaning of "monogynus" (literally "one female part"). They turn red-brown and stay on the plant into the winter. The seed pods are inflated and covered with white hairs (Elmore 1976). The seeds are bean-shaped, about 2 mm long, bright shiny yellowish (USDA 2008).

Uses

Indians made a pain-relieving poultice by boiling the roots and placing them on the site while still warm.

Rocky Mountain goats eat the twigs when smaller plants are hidden under snow (Elmore 1976).

References

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Physocarpus monogynus: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Physocarpus monogynus, the mountain ninebark or low ninebark, is a flowering shrub of western North America.

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Wikipedia authors and editors
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wikipedia EN