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Lonicera tatarica is a species of honeysuckle known by the common name Tatarian honeysuckle. [2] Native to Eurasia, the plant is one of several exotic bush honeysuckles present in North America, [3] being considered an invasive species there.
Lonicera morrowii × Lonicera tatarica → Lonicera ×bella Zabel is a frequent honeysuckle hybrid known from CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, VT. It is variable but usually displays a pink (fading yellow) corolla that is scarcely saccate at the base, sparsely pubescent branchlets and leaf blades, and peduncles 5–15 mm long (compare character states ...
The Pink Tatarian Honeysuckle Shrubs will delight your senses in late spring to early summer with its tiny pink flowers which will turn to red berries for feeding wildlife over winter. Plant your Honeysuckle bushes, lonicera tatarica L. in full sun to part shade for a fast growing hedge.
Photos and information about Minnesota flora - Tatarian Honeysuckle: shrub to 10 feet, hairless opposite leaves; long-stalked pairs of irregular, 2-lipped pink to white flowers in leaf axils, ¾ to 1-inch long.
Tatarian honeysuckle. A vigorous, upright, deciduous shrub about 3-4m tall, with dark green leaves, paler beneath to 6cm long. Masses of tubular 5-lobed pink flowers are produced along the stems in late spring and early summer, followed by red berries
The flowers have a sweet fragrance typical of honeysuckle. This honeysuckle prefers partial sun, moist, fertile, loamy soil, but it is highly adaptable to a wide variety of soil and environmental conditions. It can grow in full sun to shade, and moist to dry, gravelly, or sandy soils.
Tatarian honeysuckle (Lonicera tatarica) is an ornamental shrub native to Central Asia, and can be found extensively across North America. It grows in a broad range of soils and reaches heights of up to 3 m. Due to its hardiness, it has been used as erosion control and to reclaim strip-mined soils.