Southern Blackhaw Viburnum
Southern Blackhaw Viburnum, Rusty Blackhaw Viburnum
Viburnum rufidulum
Caprifoliaceae (Honeysuckle Family)
▲ flowering shrub at Master Gardener Demonstration Garden in Nathanael Greene Park
▲ wild shrub in open woods near South Creek in Springfield
▲ flowers
▲ foliage, showing dark red buds
▲ fall color on plant at Springfield Nature Center
Location near campus: in woods on north side of South Creek, west of McDaniel Park in Springfield; along trails at Springfield Nature Center
Viburnum rufidulum: Southern Blackhaw Viburnum, Rusty Blackhaw Viburnum
- leaves opposite, simple, deciduous, ovate to rounded,2-4 inches long and about 1/2 as wide with slightly serrate margins; leaves are shiny, leathery dark green above and pale green below; pubescent when young; fall color often bright red
- petiole is winged and with rust-colored hairs
- stems glabrous, short & stiff and gray-brown in color
- size is to 20' tall and about 2/3 as wide, often smaller in cultivation
- flowers are white in terminal flat-topped clusters (cymes) and fruit is a pinkish to black drupe which ripens in early fall
- grows well in sun or shade; prefers dryer soils
- slow to medium growth rate
- native to Missouri
- another native viburnum--Blackhaw Viburnum (Viburnum prunifolium) has thinner, hairless leaves and buds are gray and not covered with dark rusty-red hairs