Crape Myrtle leaves are green. Though, a white powdery fungus called powdery mildew sometimes attacks the leaves of many older selections of crepe myrtles, so they may look different because of the fungus.
A crape myrtle is a deciduous tree, meaning that the leaves go dormant and fall off during fall and winter.
The latin name for the Crape Myrtle is Lagerstroemia indica.
No, a Crape Myrtle is an angiosperm, not a gymnosperm. Gymnosperms are seed-bearing plants that do not produce flowers, while angiosperms produce flowers and have seeds enclosed in fruits. Crape Myrtles produce flowers and have seeds contained within capsules.
That one has dense foliage from near-ground level up and is lower-lying and that the other has visible trunks and is tallerare two differences between crape myrtle (Lagerstroemiaspp) bushes and shrubs.Specifically, all bushes are shrubs even though not all shrubs are bushes. A bush has dense foliage throughout its length and width whereas a shrub has a visibly foliage-free zone through which stems and trunks branch. A bush tends to mature to a maximum height of 15 feet (457.2 centimeters) whereas a shrub matures to a maximum height of twice that and therefore may be considered a small tree.
Crape Myrtle (Lagerstroemia indica) has a simple entire (smooth edges, without lobes or teeth) leaf type.
A crape myrtle is a deciduous tree, meaning that the leaves go dormant and fall off during fall and winter.
Lagerstroemia is the scientific name of Crape Myrtle.
The latin name for the Crape Myrtle is Lagerstroemia indica.
The domain for a crepe myrtle, as a plant, is Eukaryota.
No, a Crape Myrtle is an angiosperm, not a gymnosperm. Gymnosperms are seed-bearing plants that do not produce flowers, while angiosperms produce flowers and have seeds enclosed in fruits. Crape Myrtles produce flowers and have seeds contained within capsules.
That one has fruit capsules, oppositely-occurring leaves, and showy flowers and is native to Australia and non-nitrogen-fixing while the other has fruity drupes, spirally-occurring leaves, and small catkins and is not native to Australia but is nitrogen-fixing are differences between crape and wax myrtles.Specifically, both myrtles can be found as fragrantly deciduous or evergreen shrubs and trees. But crape myrtle (Lagerstroemia spp) has the advantage of being native to Australia (and Oceania and south and southeast Asia) while wax myrtle (Myricaspp) can be found growing natively on every continent except Antarctica and Australia. Wax myrtle nevertheless is blessed with the ability to replenish nutrient-poor soil whereas crape myrtle is not a nitrogen-fixing woody plant. The two genera tend not to be confused because of the crape myrtle's capsuled fruit, colorful blooms and simple leaves and the wax myrtle's catkined flowers, complex leaves, and tasty drupes.
Its Vascular.
A crape myrtle is an angiosperm. Angiosperms are flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed within an ovary, which develops into a fruit. Crape myrtles produce flowers and fruits, classifying them as angiosperms.
Aphids are pests that turn crape myrtle leaves shiny. The soft-bodied insect pest in question (Aphidoidea superfamily) excretes honeydew. The waste product leaves foliage shiny and sticky enough to attract ants and sooty mold.
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Lagerstroemia speciosa (Giant Crape-myrtle, Queen's Crape-myrtle, Banabá Plant, or Pride of India, Jarul)See link below:
Simple is a single leaf, compound is three, or a cluster of leafs off of one stem. A simple leaf has single leaf lamina whereas compound leaf has more than one leaf lamina (leaflet).