Status:
valid
                
                
                    
Authors:
(Cham. & Schltdl.) M.Roem.
                
                
                    
Source:
rjp
                
                
                    
Year:
1847
                
                
                    
Citation Micro:
Fam. Nat. Syn. Monogr. 3: 139. 1847 [Apr 1847]
                
                
                    
WFO Identifier:
wfo-0001015117
                
             
            
            
                
                
                
            
            
            
                                    
                        Common Names
                        
                        - Sambucifolia Sorbus
 - Sorbus Sambucifolia
 - Elder-Leaved Mountain Ash
                         
                     
                                
                
                    
                    
                    
                
                
                
                
                                                
                                    
                        Uses & Benefits
                        
                            Sorbus sambucifolia is used as an ornamental plant in gardens and parks. It is also used for erosion control and as a source of food and shelter for wildlife.                        
                     
                                
                                    
                        
Cultivars, Varieties & Sub-species
                        Sorbus sambucifolia var.  pumila (Raf.) Koehne
                    
                                                    
                        Flower, Seeds and Seedlings
                        
                            The flowers of Sorbus sambucifolia are white and have five petals. The seeds are small, brown, and oval-shaped. The seedlings are small and have thin, green leaves.                        
                     
                                
                
                
                                    
                        Cultivation and Propagation
                        
                            Sorbus sambucifolia is a shrub that can be propagated from seed or cuttings. Seeds should be sown in the spring in a cold frame and the seedlings transplanted into individual pots when they are large enough to handle. Cuttings should be taken in the summer and rooted in a cold frame. The plants should be planted out in their permanent positions in late autumn or early winter.                        
                     
                                                    
                        Where to Find Sorbus sambucifolia
                        
                            Sorbus sambucifolia is native to the United States and can be found in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee.                        
                     
                
                
                                    
                        Species in the Sorbus genus
                        
                            Sorbus ligustrifolia, 
Sorbus arranensis, 
Sorbus decipiens, 
Sorbus leptophylla, 
Sorbus matsumurana, 
Sorbus eminens, 
Sorbus rupicola, 
Sorbus croceocarpa, 
Sorbus mougeotii, 
Sorbus cashmiriana, 
Sorbus scopulina, 
Sorbus commixta, 
Sorbus gorodkovii, 
Sorbus hajastana, 
Sorbus kusnetzovii, 
Sorbus pontica, 
Sorbus tauricola, 
Sorbus himalaica, 
Sorbus subulata, 
Sorbus splendida, 
Sorbus monbeigii, 
Sorbus aria, 
Sorbus arachnoidea, 
Sorbus armeniaca, 
Sorbus filipes, 
Sorbus forrestii, 
Sorbus glomerulata, 
Sorbus graeca, 
Sorbus kiukiangensis, 
Sorbus koehneana, 
Sorbus kurzii, 
Sorbus lanata, 
Sorbus luristanica, 
Sorbus macrantha, 
Sorbus microphylla, 
Sorbus persica, 
Sorbus reducta, 
Sorbus rehderiana, 
Sorbus rinzenii, 
Sorbus rufopilosa, 
Sorbus sargentiana, 
Sorbus scalaris, 
Sorbus setschwanensis, 
Sorbus subfusca, 
Sorbus takhtajanii, 
Sorbus tamamschjanae, 
Sorbus tianschanica, 
Sorbus turkestanica, 
Sorbus wilsoniana, 
Sorbus brevipetiolata,                         
 
                     
                                                    
                        Species in the Rosaceae family
                        
                            Acaena macrocephala, 
Acaena antarctica, 
Acaena argentea, 
Acaena boliviana, 
Acaena buchananii, 
Acaena echinata, 
Acaena agnipila, 
Acaena cylindristachya, 
Acaena confertissima, 
Acaena eupatoria, 
Acaena integerrima, 
Acaena leptacantha, 
Acaena ovina, 
Acaena magellanica, 
Acaena masafuerana, 
Acaena patagonica, 
Acaena tenera, 
Acaena platyacantha, 
Acaena pumila, 
Acaena splendens, 
Acaena stricta, 
Acaena stangii, 
Acaena trifida, 
Acaena pallida, 
Acaena caespitosa, 
Acaena saccaticupula, 
Acaena subincisa, 
Acaena hirsutula, 
Acaena fissistipula, 
Acaena glabra, 
Acaena tesca, 
Acaena juvenca, 
Acaena emittens, 
Acaena dumicola, 
Acaena profundeincisa, 
Acaena minor, 
Acaena alpina, 
Acaena montana, 
Acaena myriophylla, 
Acaena poeppigiana, 
Acaena anserovina, 
Acaena sericea, 
Acaena latebrosa, 
Acaena sarmentosa, 
Acaena elongata, 
Acaena exigua, 
Acaena rorida, 
Acaena novae-zelandiae, 
Acaena pinnatifida, 
Acaena inermis,