Landscape Use
Scarlet
elder belongs in the cool, moist woodland landscape beneath the
canopy of yellow birch (Betula alleghaniensis) and sugar
maple (Acer saccharum), keeping company with beaked
filbert (Corylus cornuta), roundleaf dogwood (Cornus
rugosa), and mapleleaf viburnum (Viburnum acerifolium).
With a minimum of effort, you can prune scarlet elders to form
small, open-branched trees. Groupings of artfully pruned plants
add a great deal of structural interest to the winter woodland
landscape.
Sambucus racemosa
var. pubens produces flowers and fruits earlier than its
better-known relative, American elder (S. canadensis).
The two can be grown together, the bright red berries of
scarlet elder mingling with American elder’s flat-topped
clusters of creamy white flowers.
Because
scarlet elder is not tolerant of most environmental stresses
associated with managed landscapes, avoid using it in seasonally
flooded areas, in sites exposed to deicing salts, or in sites
surrounded by paving or buildings that intensify summer heat.
Also, provide scarlet elder with water in summer droughts.
Culture
Hardiness:
USDA zone 3a
Soil
requirements:
prefers
moderately to well-drained soils
Light
requirements:
very
shade-tolerant
Stress
tolerances:
soil
compaction—intolerant
pollution—intolerant
deicing salts—intolerant
urban heat islands—intolerant
drought—intolerant
seasonal flooding—very intolerant
Insect and
disease problems:
none serious
Wildlife Value
The fruits of
S. pubens are poisonous to humans; however, they
are eaten safely by many bird species, including red-eyed
vireos, woodland thrushes, catbirds, and upland game birds, as
well as by large and small mammals.
Maintenance
Irrigation:
Water shrubs regularly for at least one year after planting.
Apply 1 inch of water over the root zone once a week until
leaves fall in autumn: in general, a shrub’s root zone extends
twice as wide as its canopy. Once established, plants should
survive even when no rain falls for up to two weeks. Keep soil
moist by watering thoroughly once per week when needed.
Fertilization:
Landscape trees and shrubs should not be fertilized unless a
soil test indicates a need. Correct soil pH, if necessary, by
amending the backfill soil. No nitrogen fertilizer should be
added at planting or during the first growing season.
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To learn more about native woody plants
Visit the Eastern Maine Native Plant
Arboretum at University of Maine Cooperative
Extension's Penobscot County office, 307
Maine Avenue in Bangor. Established in 2004, the arboretum
displays 24 different native tree and shrub species
that can be used in managed landscapes. |
Reviewed by Cathy
Neal, Extension professor, University of New Hampshire
Cooperative Extension.
Photos by Reeser C. Manley.
Illustration by Margery Read, Extension master gardener.
 |
This
series of publications
and the associated research were made possible in part
by the Maine Forest Service’s Project Canopy. |
©
2008