Plant Image Data Base
Sedum
spurium
Two-row Stonecrop
(Crassulaceae - Orpine Family)
Form
- short herbaceous semi-evergreen groundcover
- maturing at about 4" tall in foliage and 6" tall when in flower,
quickly spreading to form mats of dense stems and miniature foliage
- procumbent mat growth habit, becoming a prostrate mat in Winter
- slow to medium growth rate (in clump diameter)
Culture
- full sun to partial shade
- performs best in full sun in moist, well-drained soils, but it is
extremely urban tolerant, and is usually reserved for highly stressful sites
around rockery that exposes it to thin soils, poor soils, very dry soils,
soils of various pH, low fertility, extreme heat, drought, full sun, and
high light reflectance; however, it is not tolerant of wet or poorly drained
soils
- propagated primarily by rooted stem cuttings, but also by crown division
or segmentation of the self-rooted prostrate stems
- Orpine Family, with no diseases or pests of significance
- commonly available in containers
Foliage
- semi-evergreen succulent leaves are green, bronzed, red, crimson, or
variegated (depending upon cultivar), usually abscising all but the most
terminal leaves by late Winter, with the remaining leaves staying bronzed
into the following Spring
- opposite (or clustered at the stem apices), obovate (fan-shaped), crenate,
and sessile to short-petioled
Flowers
- red, pink, or pinkish-white, flowering profusely for two to four weeks in
June and July, especially on mature plants that are under a moderate amount
of stress (or put another way, those that have it "good" in terms
of soil, moisture, and nutrition tend to have predominantly lush vegetative
growth rather than reproductive growth)
- erect inflorescences occur above the foliage, with the vertical peduncles
radiating flat-topped pedicels at the apex, bejeweled with many
five-petaled, star-like flowers
Fruits
- wirey pedicels are the predominate feature on the fruiting heads, and will
persist into the following season if unsheared and will detract somewhat
from the superior foliage effect
- best to dead-head after flowering, to promote vegetative growth
Twigs
- herbaceous stems are green, red/purple, or light brown, and self-root at
the nodes as they lie upon the ground
ID Summary
- procumbent to prostrate stems are adorned with small, fan-shaped, crenate
foliage that is green, heavily bronzed, or red in color, and topped by
interesting flat-topped inflorescences in early to mid-Summer, having
miniature star-shaped flowers with five petals that are red, pink, or white
in color
Function
- usually located in poor thin soils, soil less media, at the edge of beds,
or even in rock crevices
- often found as a complementary plant that weaves in and around other
plants or rambles over rockery, and mixes well with other perennials in
raised planters, strawberry jars, edgings, rock gardens, and wall overhangs;
less often found as a solid groundcover in the landscape
Texture
- medium to fine texture
- thin to thick density, depending upon soil availability and competition
with other plants
Assets
- very urban tolerant (especially to full sun, poor soils, thin soils, and
prolonged drought; basically, it will grow where nothing else will, as long
as it is sunny and dry)
- foliage color variants (usually bronzed or red, but also variegated)
- small but showy pink inflorescences in early Summer (especially when
viewed among rock outcrops)
- rapidly spreading under optimum conditions
Liabilities
- prone to invasion and domination by weeds (since it is often located in
tucked-away, stressful spots that do not have mulch, and that harbor only
the toughest plants that are naturally dispersed by seed or rhizomes)
- slowly invasive, and hard to extract from the crevices that it can root
into
Habitat
- zones 3 to 8
- native to the Caucasus
Variants
- several exist, primarily noted for foliage color and/or flower color
- Sedum spurium 'Dragon's Blood' - the most popular cultivar, very
vigorous, with deep mauve or dark pink inflorescences, noted for its
greenish-bronzed to reddish-bronzed foliage throughout the Summer, that
turns to a deep and attractive burgandy in Winter
- Sedum spurium 'Red Carpet' - reddish foliage throughout the growing
season, becoming a deep crimson in Autumn and Winter, rarely having deep
carmine flowers; not as vigorous as most other green- or bronze-foliaged
cultivars
- Sedum spurium 'Tricolor' (also known as 'Variegatum') - foliage is
a combination of faded jade green, white, and pink; this cultivar is weak,
spreads slowly, is not dependably Winter hardy, and rarely flowers
Translation
- Sedum translates as "to sit or hold fast", probably
referring to its adventitious root formation and attachment from its stem
nodes under adverse conditions.
- spurium translates as "false", of uncertain meaning.
Purpose
- Two-row Stonecrop is an urban tolerant, Summer-flowering, tough
groundcover, with the Winter effect of semi-evergreen bronzed foliage in
many cases.
Summary
- Sedum spurium is known as a creeping groundcover that forms a low
dense procumbent mat and is very urban tolerant, especially to heat, full
sun, drought, and poor thin rocky soils.
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