The Rhododendron reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Rhododendron

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Rhododendron
A rhododendron from Subsection Arborea
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Ericales
Family: Ericaceae
Genus: Rhododendron
Subgenera
Azaleastrum
Candidastrum
Hymenanthes
Mumeazalea
Pentanthera
Rhododendron
Therorhodion
Tsutsusi
Source: RBG, Edinburgh
Rhododendron is a genus of flowering plants in the family Ericaceae. This is such a large genus that the plants are organised by subgenus, section, subsection and alliance.

These subgenera can be basically divided into four groups:

Rhododendron is a very widely distributed genus, but a major concentration of diversity occurs in the Sino-Himalayan mountains of southeast Asia from central Nepal east to Yunnan and Sichuan, with other significant areas of diversity in the mountains of Indo-China, Japan and Taiwan. Several species also occur in North America and a few in Europe, and some tropical species occur as far south as Borneo. They grow well in acid soil, and are noted for their many clusters of large trumpet-shaped blooms and their glossy oval leaves. Most rhododendrons flower for only a brief period each year, but during that time they provide a stunning display of massed colour.

image:purplerhododendron.jpg

The Rhododendron is the State Flower of Washington and West Virginia.

There are several hundred cultivars of Rhododendron. These have been bred to have larger or smaller flowers, and a vast array of petal colours. An example of a cultivar popular in the US is Rhododendron 'President Roosevelt'.

image:palepinkrhododendron.jpg

Rhododendrons have a toxin called grayanotoxin in their pollen and nectar. People have been known to become ill from eating honey made by bees feeding on rhododendron and azalea flowers.

See also: azalea

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