of cultivating it as a dwarf cultivar for landscape use. In the landscape, it grew up to an average height of 1.5 m in 4 years ( Fig. 3A ), whereas the average height of typical alder-leaf mountain mahogany is 3.14 m (Gucker, 2006). This cultivar had
Search Results
Asmita Paudel, Youping Sun, Larry A. Rupp, and Richard Anderson
Ji-Jhong Chen, Heidi Kratsch, Jeanette Norton, Youping Sun, and Larry Rupp
), Artemisia nova (black sagebrush), Ceratoides lanata (syn. Krascheninnikovia lanata ) (winterfat), and Cercocarpus montanus (alder-leaf mountain mahogany), are susceptible to overwatering and wet rooting substrates ( Mee et al., 2003 ). Parkinson et al