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Ligustrum ovalifolium

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Genus
  
Ligustrum

Higher classification
  
Privet

Order
  
Tribe
  
Oleeae

Scientific name
  
Ligustrum ovalifolium

Rank
  
Species

Ligustrum ovalifolium PRIVET GREEN Ligustrum ovalifolium Hedging Plants Trees Shrubs

Similar
  
Privet, Ligustrum vulgare, Ligustrum japonicum, Lonicera nitida, Cherry laurel

A focus on privet hedging all you need to know about ligustrum ovalifolium


Ligustrum ovalifolium, also known as Korean privet, California privet, garden privet, and oval-leaved privet, is a shrub in the privet genus Ligustrum.

Contents

Ligustrum ovalifolium Garden Privet Ligustrum ovalifolium NatureSpot

The species is native to Japan and Korea. It is occasionally known as Japanese privet, but is not to be confused with Ligustrum japonicum which is predominantly called by that common name.

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Privet hedge ligustrum ovalifolium


Description

Ligustrum ovalifolium Ligustrum ovalifolium landscape architect39s pages

Ligustrum ovalifolium is a dense, fast-growing, deciduous (evergreen/semi-evergreen in warm winter areas) shrub. It grows to 10–15 feet (3.0–4.6 m) tall and wide. It has a thick, fleshy leaf that is green on the top, and greenish-yellow on the underside.

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It flowers in midsummer, the abundant white blooms producing a unique pungent fragrance, unpleasant to some. They are borne in panicles. They have four curled-back petals and two high stamens with yellow or red anthers, between which is the low pistil; the petals and stamens fall off after the flower is fertilized, leaving the pistil in the calyx tube. Flowering starts after 330 growing degree days.

Ligustrum ovalifolium 1000 images about ligustrum ovalifolium on Pinterest Gardens

The fruits, borne in clusters, are small purple to black drupes, poisonous for humans but readily eaten by many birds. In favorable growing conditions, individual shrubs may produce thousands of fruits.

Uses

Ligustrum ovalifolium Ovalifolium 175200cm

Ligustrum ovalifolium is used as a food plant by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Common emerald, Common marbled carpet, Copper underwing, The Engrailed, Mottled beauty, Scalloped hazel, Small angle shades, The V-pug and Willow beauty.

All parts of plant are poisonous if ingested by humans.

Cultivation

Ligustrum ovalifolium Ligustrum ovalifolium Oval Leaved Privet Plants Trees and Hedging

The species Ligustrum ovalifolium is widely cultivated as an ornamental plant in many countries, as a shrub, and grouped for an informal or formal hedge. Privets need to be trimmed several times during a growing season, in order to maintain a formal hedge shape. Regularly trimmed plants do not produce flowers or fruit.

Ligustrum ovalifolium Ligustrum ovalifolium landscape architect39s pages

Several cultivars are used in gardens and for hedging, including Ligustrum ovalifolium 'Aureum,' the Golden Privet, with oval, rich yellow leaves with green centers. It has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Ligustrum ovalifolium is the most common hedging plant species in cultivation in the United Kingdom.

Naturalized—invasive species

The species is reportedly naturalized in France, Spain, Italy, the Balearic Islands, Saint Helena, Réunion, Chiapas (México), Costa Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, the Juan Fernandez Islands, Ontario, and in the United States.

Ligustrum ovalifolium has also been listed as an invasive species in areas of the United States, including: California, Hawaii, Washington state, Texas, Missouri, Alabama, and many of the Mid-Atlantic and Northeastern states. 46 states have it listed on their noxious weed lists.

References

Ligustrum ovalifolium Wikipedia