Common Name: multiflora rose
Family: Rosaceae
Common Synonyms: none
USDA Hardiness Zone: 3b-8b
Growth Habit: Shrub
Origin: Asia
FISC Category: -
FDACS Listed Noxious Weed: No
Introduction Date: Earliest Florida specimen vouchered in 1980
IFAS Assessment:
Shrub with stems 1-4 m long, erect at base, arching above, glabrous, prickles mostly paired, flattened, broad-based, curved. Leaves alternate, odd-pinnate, leaflets 5-11, 1-6 cm long, 0.8-3 cm wide, obovate to elliptic, serrate, base cuneate or rounded, glabrous above, pubescent below, conspicuous stipules pectinate-serrate. Inflorescence a pyramid corymb, with 25-100 or more flowers. Flowers 1-2 cm in diameter, petals 5, white to light pink, 5-12 mm long, stamens numerous. Fruit ellipsoidal, 6-9 mm long, red and fleshy when ripe.
Fields, floodplains, forests.
Very invasive to the north of Florida. Multiflora rose grows rapidly forming dense, impenetrable thickets. Very invasive to the north of Florida.
NA
Bryson, C. T. and M. S. DeFelice, editors. Weeds of the South. University of Georgia Press. Athens, Georgia. 2009. Southeast Exotic Plant Council. 2013. http://www.se-eppc.org/manual/multirose.html. Accessed on Decmeber 11, 2013.
NatureServe. 2013. NatureServe Explorer: An online encyclopedia of life [web application]. Version 7.1. NatureServe, Arlington, Virginia. Available http://www.natureserve.org/explorer. Accessed on December 11, 2013.
Dave's Garden. 2013. PlantFiles: Buschel rose, Rosa multiflora. http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/31975/. Accessed on December 10, 2013.