Viburnum acerifolium
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Viburnum acerifolium, the mapleleaf viburnum, maple-leaved arrowwood[1] or dockmackie,[2] is a species of Viburnum native to eastern North America.
Description
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The shrub often suckers and can form a colony in time.
Distribution and habitat
Viburnum acerifolium is native to eastern North America, from southwestern Quebec and Ontario south to northern Florida and eastern Texas.[3] It is found in the US states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, New York, Vermont,[4] Illinois, Wisconsin, and Arkansas.[5]
It is adapted for USDA hardiness zones of 4 to 8. It grows in and around upland forest, able to do well in full shade and dry soils. It grows mostly in acidic soil of pH 5.0 to 6.5, but can tolerate up to 7.5.
Landscape architects and designers have often recommended it for shady, dry locations for several decades, but it is only sold at a few very large, diverse nurseries or specialty or native plant nurseries and is not generally well known in the trade or with homeowners. Its native habitats include thickets, mixed woods, bluffs, and ravines.[6]
Ecology
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The fruit attracts butterflies and birds. Viburnum acerifolium is a larval host to the Celastrina ladon butterfly.
The berries are eaten by various mammals including skunks, rabbits, deer,[5] the eastern chipmunk, white-footed mouse and deer mice. V. acerifolium also attracts various aphids, such as Viburnum leaf beetle, the wood-boring larvae of Oberea deficiens and Oberea tripunctata.[7]
The scientific and common names refer to the superficial similarity of the leaves to those of some maples (Acer); the plant is occasionally mistaken for young maples, but is readily distinguished by the flowers and fruit; the viburnum produces small, purple berries, while maples produce dry, winged seeds.
Uses
The black berries, available from late summer to autumn, can be made into jam.[8]
References
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- Viburnum
- Flora of Eastern Canada
- Flora of the Eastern United States
- Flora of the Appalachian Mountains
- Flora of the Great Lakes region (North America)
- Flora of the Southeastern United States
- Plants described in 1753
- Taxa named by Carl Linnaeus
- Least concern flora of the United States