Ninebark (Physocarpus opulifolius) flowers and fruit. Upper left: a domed cluster of ninebark flowers. Upper right: a single ninebark flower viewed face on. The numerous stamens have white filaments and dark red or brown terminal anthers. The five styles are also white, but the stigmas on their tips are yellow. The orange-colored hypanthium dominates the flower. Lower left: lateral view of a ninebark flower with a (slightly out of focus) group of follicles (the fruit) in the left foreground. A katydid (Scudderia sp.) nymph (immature stage) is climbing the flower on the right. Lower right: a cluster of ninebark fruit, each made of up 2-5 follicles containing a single seed. The dark red hue indicates the seeds are mature.
Ninebark produces round or domed clusters (racemes) of 30-50 flowers on the tips of young stems. Individual flowers are about 1/2″ across; they have a light green calyx with five triangular teeth, five white petals, 30-40 pink-tipped stamens, and 3-5 styles with yellow stigmas. The inside surface of the flower between the styles and the base of the stamens (the hypanthium) is prominently colored tan, orange, or red. After fertilization, each flower produces 2-5 adjacent fruits “follicles”), greenish-red in color, drooping from the long, slender flower pedicels. Single follicles contain a single, hard seed; the follicles are about 8 mm long with a slender, pointed beak protruding from one side. There are two varieties of ninebark characterized by whether the surface of the follicle is hairy; the variety present in Jackson Park (var. intermedius) has a hairy surface.
Ninebark (Physocarpus opulifolius) stems, bark, and leaves. (1) A ninebark twig with reddish to green bark. (2) A branch with the characteristic dark brown, peeling bark. (3) A stem of ninebark. The brown bark is peeling in numerous layers. (4) The upper surface (4a) of a ninebark leaf and the underside (4b) of the same leaf.
Ninebark is a multistemmed native shrub that can be 3-9 feet tall; the stems are often recurved and often divide into smaller stems. Young stems are light green to reddish and hairless; older stems are dark brown whose bark shreds into thin strips or broad sheets. The leaves are alternate, 5″ long and 4″ across, divided into 3-5 shallow lobes that produce an overall oval outline, with a hairless petiole 1/2-1″ long. Leaf margins bear coarse teeth or rounded bumps. Where the petiole attaches to the stem, it is flanked on either side by small linear stipules.
A ninebark (Physocarpus opulifolius) shrub on the west side of Wooded Island. The clusters of flowers contain blooms from buds to fully open flowers.
Ninebark is a multistemmed native shrub that can be 3-9 feet tall; the stems are often recurved and often divide into smaller stems. Young stems are light green to reddish and hairless; older stems are dark brown whose bark shreds into thin strips or broad sheets. The leaves are alternate, 5″ long and 4″ across, divided into 3-5 shallow lobes that produce an overall oval outline, with a hairless petiole 1/2-1″ long. Leaf margins bear coarse teeth or rounded bumps. Where the petiole attaches to the stem, it is flanked on either side by small linear stipules. Round or domed clusters (racemes) of 30-50 flowers arise on the tips of young stems. Individual flowers are about 1/2″ across; they have a light green calyx with five triangular teeth, five white petals, 30-40 pink-tipped stamens, and 3-5 styles with yellow stigmas. The inside surface of the flower between the styles and the base of the stamens (the hypanthium) is prominently colored tan, orange, or red. After fertilization, each flower produces 2-5 adjacent fruits “follicles”), greenish-red in color, drooping from the long, slender flower pedicels. Single follicles contain a single, hard seed; the follicles are about 8 mm long with a slender, pointed beak protruding from one side. There are two varieties of ninebark characterized by whether the surface of the follicle is hairy; the variety present in Jackson Park (var. intermedius) has a hairy surface.
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