Plant Image Data Base
Hibiscus
syriacus
Rose-of-Sharon or Shrub Althea
(Malvaceae - Mallow Family)
Form
- medium-sized ornamental shrub (can also be limbed up into small tree form)
- maturing at about 8' tall by 4' wide
- upright vase growth habit, often becoming arching with age if never pruned
- medium growth rate
Culture
- full sun to partial shade
- prefers moist, well-drained soils supplemented with organic matter in full
sun, but is very adaptable to various soils, soil pHs, soil compaction,
drought, heavy pruning, and pollution (and is therefore urban tolerant)
- propagated primarily by rooted stem cuttings, but also by seeds
- Mallow Family, with a few minor leaf disease and pest problems; however,
old shrubs can develop trunk cankers that may eventually prove fatal to the
plant
- abundantly available, primarily in container form but also in ball and
burlap form
Foliage
- medium green, alternate, broadly ovate, palmately veined, 3" long
leaves have three distinct lobes with sparsely dentate to crenate margins
- chartreuse fall color is poor
Flowers
- solid colors of white, red, purple, mauve, violet, or blue, or bicolors
with a different colored throat, depending upon cultivar
- continuous blooms often occur from July through September, and usually
close at night
- the 4" wide, single or double-flowering, large-petaled, very showy
flowers adorn the plant throughout the Summer
Fruits
- green to brown, ornamentally unattractive five-valved dehiscent capsules
are persistent throughout much of the Winter on older cultivars; most modern
cultivars are virtually fruitless
- if fruit capsules are present, they will shatter over the course of the
dormant season and spread their easily germinating seeds around the base of
the parent plant, forming colonies with time if in naturalized or neglected
areas
Twigs
- thin and gray, white-lenticeled, with raised leaf scars and small buds
- stems and branches do not branch very much unless pruned, resulting in
many long, straight stems that originate from about 0.5' to 1.5' above the
ground that give rise to the overall vase shape
Trunk
- white-gray and relatively smooth, branching very near to the ground unless
limbed up into tree form
ID Summary
- a narrow vase-shaped to arching growth habit, many long, straight,
relatively unbranched, light gray stems, large solitary single or double
flowers that bloom all Summer long, and ovate, shallowly-lobed, alternate
leaves are four distinctive traits of this ornamental shrub
Function
- specimen, foundation, entranceway, row, or border shrub, or planted as a
formal or informal hedge
- occasionally limbed up into small tree form
Texture
- medium texture in foliage and when bare
- average density in foliage and when bare
Assets
- showy flowers bloom throughout the entire Summer
- vase-shaped growth habit
- urban tolerant (especially to heat, humidity, drought, and poor soils)
- relatively rapid establishment
Liabilities
- spent flowers will close up and shrivel, but take several days to abscise
from the plant
- with maturity, flexible plant stems become weighted under the load of
prolific Summer flowers, and bend over halfway to the ground
- older cultivars that set heavy seed crops can self-sow to form a weedy
colony of young shrubs
- with advanced age, trunks may develop cankers that cause individual
branches to die, followed by decline and death of the entire plant
- poor fall color
Habitat
- zones 5 to 8
- native to China and India
Variants
- Hibiscus syriacus 'Aphrodite' - pink-mauve single flowers having a
dark magenta eye
- Hibiscus syriacus 'Ardens' - mauve-purple double-flowering form
- Hibiscus syriacus 'Bluebird' - blue-lavender single flowers having
a dark magenta eye
- Hibiscus syriacus 'Diana' - profuse blooming triploid, having pure
white single flowers that remain open at night, and set few if any fruit
- Hibiscus syriacus 'Minerva' - triploid, with lavender-mauve single
flowers, each having a red eye
- Hibiscus syriacus 'Red Heart' - white single flowers, each having a
scarlet eye
Translation
- Hibiscus is the Greek name for Mallow.
- syriacus translates as "of Syria," where it was once
thought to be native to.
Purpose
- Rose-of-Sharon is a shrub with a vase growth habit, noted for its very
showy Summer-long bloom period.
Summary
- Hibiscus syriacus is a shrub with large showy flowers (in single or
double flowering form, with solid colors or bicolors) that blooms all Summer
long and has a distinctive vase-shaped growth habit.
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