Dwarf Spiraea

Description

Taxonomists disagree on whether or not this is a variety of Spiraea betulifolia or should be considered its own species. When I obtained seeds, it was listed as Spiraea corymbosa. The Pennsylvania Natural Heritage Program has it under the latter, and lists this as S1 critically imperiled. These are seed grown, despite the fact that they’re normally found in large clonal populations. How dwarf is dwarf? This tops out at 3ft x 3ft at most, but can be smaller. As you can see in the photo, it blooms on new wood, even on first year plants.

I’m new to this one and hoping to establish a population, but I’m sharing a few of the ones I’ve grown with you since they did fairly well. I don’t know much about this particular variety. Most information I’ve seen is specific to Spiraea betulifolia. This does have a much smaller habit, and the flowers are in corymbs instead of panicles.

Additional information

Family

Container Size

Growth Cycle

Maximum Height

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Lighting Requirements

Heliophily

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NatureServe Global Rank

NatureServe National Rank

NatureServe State Rank

S1 – critically imperiled in PA

Sociability Index

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Benefit To Habitat

bird food, caterpillar host, keystone, nectar, pollen, wildlife cover

Tolerates

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Ornamental Features

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Ethnobotanical

Garden Theme

butterfly garden, cottage garden, pollinator garden, dry garden, herb garden, rock garden, root garden, container garden, wild garden, formal garden, conservation garden

Suggested Use

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Judgy Judy Factor

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