DECIDUOUS SHRUBS. 
483 
THE COTONEASTER. Cotojteaster. 
Shrubs, deciduous and evergreen, from four to twenty feet high. 
The leaves of some varieties resemble the quince leaf, and others 
the leaves of the purple fringe tree. Mostly half-hardy. 
The Common Cotoneaster. C. vulgaris.— K shrub three to 
five feet high. Flowers small, white, slightly tinged with pink, in 
April and May. Fruit red or black, ripe in July and August. Of 
little value. 
The FriCxID Cotoneaster. C. frigida. — This is a native of the 
high mountains of Nepal, in Asia, and becomes under cultivation 
a tree from fifteen to twenty feet in height. It is sub-evergreen in 
England, but deciduous in this country. Leaves pointed-elliptical, 
smooth on the upper side, woolly on the under side, when young, 
and from three to five inches long. Flowers small, white, in ter- 
minal panicles, produced in great abundance in April and May. 
Fruit crimson or bright red, of the size of a small currant, and 
remains a long time on the tree — sometimes all winter. The growth 
is quite rapid when young, and in three or four years from tlie seed 
it bears flowers and fruit. “ As the fruit, with the greater part of 
the leaves, remains on all winter, the tree makes a splendid ap- 
pearance at that season ” (Loudon). Quite hardy in England, but 
only half-hardy in our northern States. It may be grafted on the 
hawthorn. 
The Downy Cotoneaster or Downy Nepal. C. affinis . — 
This is a more commonly cultivated variety of the above, and 
differs only in its broader and shorter leaves. Both resemble 
thrifty pyramidal dwarf pear trees, with larger and thicker leaves. 
The Pointed-leaved Cotoneaster or the Many-leaved 
Cotoneaster, C. acimiinata and C. mmmlaria^ has smaller and 
rounder leaves, a more spreading habit, and less abundant bloom. 
It is grafted by some of our nurserymen on the mountain ash. 
The Loose-flowered Cotoneaster, C. laxiflora^ is a variety 
with pink flowers borne in loose racemes in April. 
There are some dwarf evergreen varieties which are mentioned 
in the chapter on evergreen trees and shrubs. 
