Daphne odora
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Daphne odora | ||||||||||||||
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Daphne odora "Aureomarginata"
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Daphne odora F.Muell. |
Daphne odora (Winter daphne) is an evergreen shrub, grown for its incredibly fragrant, fleshy, pale-pink, tubular flowers, each with 4 spreading lobes and for its glossy foliage. The plant is native to China and Japan. The plant is fully to frost hardy, requiring full sun to part shade. The plants are found in fertile, slightly acid, peaty, well-drained soils. Plants will not tolerate transplantation as like all daphne, they hate root disturbance.Rarely produces fruits but does produce red berries after flowering in habitat.
Plants are not long lived, senescing within 8 to 10 years.[1]
Daphne odora is propagated by semi-ripe cuttings in summer. It is susceptible to viruses that cause leaf mottling.[2]
[edit] Cultivars
- D.o. form Rosacea has white and pink flowers.
- Rubra has dark red-pink flowers with reduced fragrance.
- D.o. variety variegata Aureomarginata has yellow edged leaves, very frost hardy, and more suitable to cultivation than D. odora species.[3]