365 Urban Species. #330 Beach Rose
Nov. 26th, 2006 07:01 pm
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Urban species #330: Beach rose Rosa rugosa
Rosa rugosa is a rose native to the dunes of Asia. It has been planted along beaches in North America as an ornamental and as a soil stabilizer. Its general hardiness and ability to resist drought and salt makes it a good choice for urban and roadside plantings. Cities and towns in North America and Europe, whether they are coastal or not, boast thick shrubby stands of beach roses around buildings and on traffic islands. Its flowers are open white or magenta roses, attractive to many insects and pleasing to human tastes as well. When the flower has been pollenated, the ovary swells into a huge rose hip. Urban wild food foragers are delighted to find plantings of beach roses in the fall, as they produce some of the meatiest and best tasting fruit. Ecologists and land stewards are currently debating the status of Rosa rugosa as it seems to be a moderately invasive species.

This rose hip at the perfection of ripeness was gone soon after this photo was taken.
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