Aesculus parviflora

Bottlebrush Buckeye

Hippocastanaceae

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Habitat

  • southeastern United States
  • zone 5 (possibly 4)

Habit and Form

  • 8' to 12' tall and 8' to 15' in spread
  • a deciduous, suckering, multi-stemmed shrub
  • medium to coarse texture
  • upright, irregular and spreading branching
  • somewhat similar to sumac, Rhus typhina, in growth habit

Summer Foliage

  • opposite, palmately-compound leaves, with 5 to 7 leaflets
  • leaflets 3" to 8" long, 1.25" to 4" wide
  • color typically a dark or medium green on top and grayish and pubescent underneath

Autumn Foliage

  • can be a good, clear yellow, but frequently is yellow-green

Flowers

  • blooms in mid-July, with showy white flowers
  • 8" to 12" long panicles

Fruit

  • a 1" to 3" long, pear-shaped dehiscent capsule
  • smooth husks are light brown with nuts inside
  • in the northeastern United States, fruit set is rare due to an insufficiently long growing season

Bark

  • smooth, gray and somewhat showy

Culture

  • best in full sun, but quite tolerant of partial shade
  • transplant B&B or from a container
  • prefers a moist, well-drained soil high in organic matter with slightly acid pH
  • can be rejuvenated by heavy pruning

Landscape Use

  • needs a large space because of its spreading tendency
  • good as a specimen; uncommon
  • in a border or for massing
  • erosion control, soil stabilization
  • beneath the high canopy of scattered, large shade trees
  • for decoration (flowers)

Liabilities

  • not as prone to Aesculus diseases and insect problems as other species
  • relatively maintenance free
  • can be hard to locate in the trade
  • can be somewhat invasive if given too small of a landscape space

ID Features

  • suckering habit
  • palmately-compound leaves
  • smooth fruit husks
  • buds are whitish
  • many terminals lack a terminal bud that is replaced by a long, persistent fruit pedicel or its scar
  • bundle scars usually 3
  • stems are gray

Propagation

  • by seed, but seed set will be low or fail to develop fully in short growing season locations
  • root cuttings

Cultivars/Varieties

var. serotina - An interesting natural form from Alabama with the habit of flowering up to 3 weeks later than the species. A great shrub for color in summer, often growing larger than the species (to 20' tall). Offered increasingly by specialty nurseries.

'Rogers' - A selection of A. p. var. serotina with very large inflorescences (to 30" long), later bloom and larger size (to 20'). Offered by some specialty nurseries and a worthy addition to the large landscape.

 

© Copyright Mark H. Brand, 1997-2015.

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Citation and Acknowledgements: University of Connecticut Plant Database, http://hort.uconn.edu/plants, Mark H. Brand, Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture, Storrs, CT 06269-4067 USA.