Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Rosa woodsii

Species of flowering plant From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rosa woodsii
Remove ads

Rosa woodsii is a species of wild rose known by the common names Woods' rose,[1] interior rose,[2] common wild rose, mountain rose, pear-hip rose, and prairie rose.[3]

Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
Remove ads

Description

Rosa woodsii is a perennial[4] bushy shrub which grows up to 3 metres (10 feet) tall. The shrubs can form large, dense thickets. The plant reproduces sexually by seed and vegetatively by sprouting from the root crown, layering, and by producing root suckers.[1]

The stems are straight, red to grey-brown and studded with prickles.[3] The deciduous leaves are each made up of several widely spaced sharp-toothed leaflets up to 5 centimetres (2 inches) long.

The inflorescence is a cyme of up to a few fragrant flowers with five petals in any shade of pink and measuring up to 2.5 cm in length. Flowers bloom between May and July and have many stamens and pistils.[3] The fruit is a red rose hip which may be over 1 cm long and matures in August to September.[3] They can be eaten, used in tea or as medicine.[5]

Remove ads

Distribution and habitat

It is native to North America including much of Canada and Alaska and the western and central United States. It grows in a variety of habitats such as open woods, plains, stream banks, stony slopes[4] and disturbed areas.[1]

In the Sierra Nevada, it grows to 3,400 m (11,200 ft) in moist, rocky soils in mixed coniferous forest, upper montane forest, and subalpine forest.[2]

In culture

The flower was featured as one of four different wildflowers on U.S. postage stamps issued in 2022.

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads