by Vicki Barney
A number of native shrubs have bloomed spectacularly this
spring: fragrant chokecherries with
trailing blossoms, serviceberries with bursts of blooms, mountain ash with flat-topped
flower clusters. But it is the little Mountain Snowberry that catches
my eye this time of the year.
Snowberry in bloom |
Mountain Snowberry (Symphoricarpos rotundifolius (oreophilus))
is one of a variety of snowberries native to our area. A small deciduous shrub in the honeysuckle
family, it grows 1 to 5 feet tall and is currently blooming under the shrubs
and aspens along our trails, as well as out in the undisturbed meadows. The flowers are not showy and consist of clusters
of small light pink bells at the ends of branches. In the fall, it produces clusters of showy
white berries that when broken open, reveals fruit that looks like “fine,
sparkling granular snow.” (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphoricarpos)
Mountain Snowberry is a wonderful addition to the wildlife
garden. The shrub is attractive with an
arching growth habit and small rounded leaves.
It attracts pollinators – bees, butterflies, moths, and hummingbirds – and
is both a host and a food plant. It also
provides food and shelter to birds and small mammals, as well as early spring
forage for deer and elk. Rated for USDA
plant hardiness zones 2-7, it thrives in all types of soils, and once
established, is fairly drought tolerant.
Mountain Snowberry, however, might not be right for your garden. One garden website warns that it may not be
the best behaved shrub because it spreads via rhizomes and may be thicket-forming
without regular pruning. It also is
prone to disease if growth is too dense and, while the berries are beneficial
to wildlife, they are toxic to humans.
Ingesting more than a couple of berries may cause vomiting, diarrhea,
dizziness and sedation. Last, like many
natives, it may be hard to find at a nursery.
Mountain Snowberry |
Colorado State University Extension has a great publication
that is helpful to gardeners interested in planting native shrubs called
“Native Shrubs for Colorado Landscapes.” (http://extension.colostate.edu/docs/pubs/garden/07422.pdf)
It includes tips for planting and advice
for all steps of the process, including purchasing the shrubs from commercial
nurseries. It explains why one should
not collect them from the wild – the practice reduces biodiversity and
encourages weeds – and touches on issues around finding native plants for
purchase. In fact, I’ve have found it difficult to purchase some
native plants locally. Deciding Mountain Snowberry would be an appropriate
addition to my wildlife garden, I purchased and planted “snowberry” shrubs a
couple of years back. Unfortunately, I
did not order them by their Latin name (Symphoricarpos rotundifolius/oreophilus),
so I am not sure what I received. Per Karen Vail’s Garden notes in Edible
& Medicinal Plants of the Southern Rockies, ”There is a dizzying variety
of snowberries available in nurseries, unfortunately most of them misnamed.”
Are my shrubs the native Mountain Snowberry? If not, are they wildlife friendly? Are they
thriving? Are they pretty? They don’t
look quite like the native shrubs in my neighborhood: arching growth habit,
small oval leaves, and spring flowers.
My shrubs are more robust and have larger odd shaped leaves, but they
are thriving and attractive. They are
also wildlife friendly as they have leafed out early and are sheltering
birds. They have not yet bloomed,
though, so may not provide food for wildlife.
Perhaps they will bloom later this season as they are in a shadier spot.
I will wait and see and, in the meantime, will enjoy the pretty green shrubs
that are drought tolerant and maintenance free.
Vicky Barney gardens for wildlife and is a member of the Master
Gardener Class of 2011
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