Chamaedaphne - Wikipedia Chamaedaphne calyculata, known commonly as leatherleaf or cassandra, is a perennial dwarf shrub in the plant family Ericaceae and the only species in the genus Chamaedaphne
Chamaedaphne calyculata (leatherleaf): Go Botany The leathery, narrow leaves of this plant give it its common name, leatherleaf Its rhizomes, which can extend to a foot below the ground, anchor it to even the quaking surface of a floating bog
Leatherleaf - FloraLife The popular Leatherleaf, a prominent member of the fern family, is an attractive filler for any floral arrangement Adding texture and depth to contemporary and traditional designs, their wiry stems give way to a triangular-shaped web of sprouting leaves
LEATHERLEAF - USDA Leatherleaf reclaimed large areas in raised bogs in the eastern United States that had been denuded by commercial peat removal The species is used for nesting and cover by wildlife, including mallards and ruffed grouse
Leatherleaf | Evergreen, Shade-Loving, Acidic Soil | Britannica Leatherleaf, (Chamaedaphne calyculata), evergreen shrub of the heath family (Ericaceae) The name is also sometimes applied to a stiff-leaved fern C calyculata occurs in Arctic regions and in North America as far south as Georgia
Chamaedaphne calyculata (Leatherleaf) - Gardenia Chamaedaphne calyculata (Leatherleaf) is a rhizomatous evergreen shrub of dense, mound-shaped habit with upward-arching stems adorned with profuse, urn-shaped, pure white flowers borne in one-sided, terminal racemes, up to 5 in long (12 cm)
Chamaedaphne calyculata Verdant - Plant Finder Chamaedaphne calyculata, commonly known as leatherleaf, is a rhizomatous broadleaf evergreen shrub that is native to wet soils in bogs, fens, pond peripheries and meadows in the cooler areas of North America, Europe and Asia
Chamaedaphne calyculata (Leather-leaf) - Minnesota Wildflowers Of its three contemporary, and of similar habit, evergreen bog shrubs— Andromeda glaucophllum, Kalmia polifolia and Rhododendron groenlandicum?Leather-leaf is the most common forming large clonal thickets in open wetlands from the Anoka Sandplains north Thickets are dense with wiry stems and easier to walk around than through