Hydrangea coacta (lat. Hydrangea coacta) — hortenziyakimilər fəsiləsinin hortenziya cinsinə aid bitki növü.
Hydrangea coacta (lat. Hydrangea coacta) — hortenziyakimilər fəsiləsinin hortenziya cinsinə aid bitki növü.
Hydrangea aspera is a species of flowering plant in the family Hydrangeaceae, native to the region between the Himalayas, across southern China, to Taiwan. It is a large, erect deciduous shrub growing to 3 m (10 ft) tall and wide, with broadly oval leaves. The flowers are typically borne in large flat heads in late summer, and are in variable shades of pale blue and pink, fringed by white or pale pink sterile florets.[2]
The Latin aspera means "rough-textured"[3] and refers to the downy lower surface of the leaves.
The plant is widely cultivated, and favours a sheltered position in acid or neutral soil, with best growth often in partial or afternoon shade. The leaves, in some forms exceeding 30.5 cm (12 inches) long, are vulnerable to drying winds as well as mechanical wind damage. Numerous cultivars have been produced as ornamental subjects for parks and gardens. They include:
In addition to forms of garden origin, various forms of wild origin are cultivated such as Kawakamii, Macrophylla, Robusta, Sargentiana, Strigosa, and Villosa. Phenotype for plant images returned by a web search on such terms can vary widely, a sign of unsettled taxonomy or complex expression of forms due to wide geographic ranges or other factors, with some authorities giving full species status, e. g. H. robusta and H. longipes, whereas other sources assign subspecies, e.g. H. aspera ssp. robusta, or H. aspera Kawakamii (example list of Hydrangea from collections).
The cultivar H. aspera 'Macrophylla'[4] (not to be confused with H. macrophylla) has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[5]
Hydrangea aspera is a species of flowering plant in the family Hydrangeaceae, native to the region between the Himalayas, across southern China, to Taiwan. It is a large, erect deciduous shrub growing to 3 m (10 ft) tall and wide, with broadly oval leaves. The flowers are typically borne in large flat heads in late summer, and are in variable shades of pale blue and pink, fringed by white or pale pink sterile florets.
The Latin aspera means "rough-textured" and refers to the downy lower surface of the leaves.
Hydrangea coacta es una especie de arbusto perteneciente a la familia Hydrangeaceae. Es originaria de China. Fue descrita por C.F.Wei en 1994.
Son arbustos con las ramillas jóvenes, pecíolos, e inflorescencias densamente hirsutas de color gris-blanco o ligeramente amarillo. Las ramillas son de color marrón rojizo, longitudinalmente estriadas, glabrescentes. Las láminas foliares, pecioladas, oblongo- ovadas a ovado- lanceoladas, de 3.5-6 cm × 9-14.5, como de papel grueso, densamente hirsutas abaxialmente de color blanco grisáceo y marrón tomentoso con ambos tipos de pelos de fieltro juntos y alfombrado. Las inflorescencias en cimas corimbosas, laxas, de 15 cm de ancho arqueadas. Semillas marrones, oblongas a ampliamente elipsoides, comprimidas y con alas en ambos extremos.
Se encuentran en las laderas de las montañas, a una altura de 1300 metros, en el sudoeste de Shaanxi en China.
Hydrangea coacta fue descrita por Chao Fen Wei y publicado en Guihaia 14(2): 116–117, f. 3. 1994.[1]
Hydrangea: nombre genérico que deriva de las palabras griegas: (ὕδωρ hydra) que significa "agua" y ἄγγος (gea) que significa "florero" o "vasos de agua" en referencia a la característica forma de sus cápsulas en forma de copa.[2]
Hydrangea coacta es una especie de arbusto perteneciente a la familia Hydrangeaceae. Es originaria de China. Fue descrita por C.F.Wei en 1994.