Lantana camara ‘Mine d’Or’ – Lantana camara ‘Goldmine’ – Common Lantana – Shrub Verbena –

Description

Lantana – Shrub Verbena

There are about 150 species of shrubs and perennials in this genus. They occur from tropical North, Central and South America, and South Africa, usually occurring in pine woodland and on disturbed ground. They are grown for their small, 5 lobed, trumpet shaped flowers, grouped tightly into rounded, flattened, or domed, terminal head with the youngest flower in the centers with the older flowers on the outside and they change colors. They produce coarse surfaced, oval leaves, that are closely veined, simple, and toothed, often wrinkled, held in opposite pairs or in whorls of 3. Where not hardy grow as an annual or in summer bedding. All parts may cause severe discomfort if ingested, and contact with foliage may irritate skin.

Grow in light, fertile, moist, but well drained soil in full sun. Somewhat tolerable to salt laden winds.

Prone to whiteflies, spider mites, rust, virus diseases, root knot nematode, stem rot, and leaf spot.

L. camara cultivars – Common Lantana – Shrub Verbena – This variable, often prickly stemmed, evergreen shrubs from the West Indies and Central America grows 3-6′ feet tall and wide. It produces ovate, finely wrinkled, strongly scented, slightly toothed, deep green leaves, 2-4″ long. From late spring to late autumn it bears flower heads 1-2″ across, in colors ranging from white to yellow and salmon-pink to red or purple, often in combinations.

‘Mine d’Or’ – ‘Goldmine’ – has golden yellow flowers

Zones 11