Mediaroma Agro Producer Company Limited

Forestiera segregata Florida privet swampprivet rare native berry seed 100 SEEDS

Forestiera segregata Florida privet swampprivet rare native berry seed 100 SEEDS

USD 17.95 USD
SKU: mInDM3jr

Specifications

Return Shipping Will Be Paid ByBuyer
All Returns AcceptedReturns Accepted
Item Must Be Returned Within30 Days
Refund Will Be Given AsMoney Back
Common NamePrivet
BrandUnbranded
TypeTrees

Package of 100 seeds Florida privet, Florida swampprivetForestiera segregata General Landscape Uses: Accent shrub or small tree. Ecological Restoration Notes: A shrub along hammock especially along the coast. Description: Large shrub or small tree with a dense, irregular crown composed of many small trunks from crooked trunks. Bark pale or creamy, thin, smooth with many breathing pores (lenticels). Leaves dark green above, 3/4-2 inches long. Semi-deciduous, with the old leaves falling as the new flush of growth begins.Dimensions: Typically 8-15 feet in height in South Florida; to 17.5 feet in Florida. Often as broad as tall.Growth Rate: Moderate to fast.Range: Southeastern United States south to the Monroe County Keys; Bermuda and the West Indies. Very rare and scattered in the Monroe County Keys.Habitats: Hammocks and hammock edges; understory shrub in pine rocklands.Soils: Moist, well-drained sandy or limestone soils, with humusy top layer.Nutritional Requirements: Moderate; can grow in nutrient poor soils, but needs some organic content to thrive.Salt Water Tolerance: Low; does not tolerate long-term flooding by salt or brackish water.Salt Wind Tolerance: High; can tolerate moderate amounts of salt wind without injury.Drought Tolerance: High; does not require any supplemental water once established.Light Requirements: Full sun.Flower Color: Yellowish-green.Flower Characteristics: Semi-showy, in small clusters from the axils of the previous year's growth. Dioecious, with male and female flowers on different plants, or polygamodioecious, with a few flowers of the opposite sex or bisexual flowers on the same plant.Flowering Season: All year; peak in spring.Fruit: Black or dark purple drupe.Wildlife and Ecology: Provides significant food and cover for wildlife. Birds eat the fruits.Horticultural Notes: Can be grown from de-pulped seed. Cover with soil and place in full sun.Comments: This shrub grow readily in the garden from seed. Synonyms: plants with smaller leaves growing in the pine rocklands of Miami-Dade County have been described as a distinct species, F. pinetorum, or variety, F. segregata var. pinetorum.

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