Lonicera L., commonly known as honeysuckle, is a genus of woody plants and belongs to the family Caprifoliaceae. There are 180 recognized species of deciduous or evergreen, bushy, candent, twining or creeping shrubs distributed in Asia, Europe, and
Haskap ( Lonicera caerulea ), also known as honeyberry or blue honeysuckle, is a relatively new berry crop in North America. The woody perennial shrub produces edible blue berries that vary greatly in flavor, shape, and size. The flavor has been
hardy kiwifruit [ Actinidia arguta (Siebold & Zucc.) Planch. Ex Miq.], and the blue honeysuckle, also called honeyberry or haskap ( Lonicera caerulea L.), are provided. CHINESE GOOSEBERRY ( ACTINIDIA LINDL.) FAMILY SECTION Actinidia , commonly called
During the last few years only a few species have been regularly used in the European urban landscape [i.e., herbaceous species or evergreen shrubs such as cotoneaster ( Cotoneaster spp.) and honeysuckle ( Lonicera spp.)], but many other species
trade #1 containers under 0%, 40%, or 70% shade for sweetbells, hobblebush, and american fly honeysuckle. Of the three species, sweetbells may be the easiest for growers to adopt, because it rooted at 88% success without the use of exogenous auxin and
suppress the shoot length of goldflame honeysuckle ( Lonicera xheckrottii Rehder); however, Cohen (1978 ) did not find a difference in shoot length when it was applied to Rhododendren L. cultivars. Conclusion Pinching of ‘Orange Spice’ did not
invasive species, japanese barberry and winged euonymus. American filbert, buttonbush, northern bush honeysuckle, sweet fern, and sweet gale performed as well as the invasive species. Steeplebush did not perform as well due to powdery mildew and less than
additional landscape-grown vine and groundcover species. Materials and methods Evaluation of N fertilizer requirements. Three vine species [coral honeysuckle ( Lonicera sempervirens ), cross vine ( Bignonia capreolata ), and pipe vine ( Aristolochia sp
cultivation of fruits such as pear ( Chai et al., 2013 ) and Chinese herbs such as honeysuckle ( Zeng et al., 2017 ). However, no study has evaluated the effectiveness of soil testing and fertilizer recommendation techniques in the context of pumpkin
honeysuckle ( Lonicera villosa ) produced greater root dry weights and root system volumes in 100% perlite than in substrates with less perlite ( Hayes and Peterson, 2019 ). It is unclear why mountain fly honeysuckle and the three species we investigated in