Snails/slugs most likely. For that you can use rock salt from hardware store or look for a product with metaldehyde like deadline. ID the pest for certain though before you make a purchase. Snails/slugs aren't insects so the products for them not likely to work on anything else
Yes, barberry bushes are deciduous plants, which means they lose their leaves during the winter months.
Compost is the best fertilizer for barberry bushes (Berberis spp).Specifically, barberry bushes can handle a variety of environmental and soil conditions. They do not need special fertilizer attention when they grow in grass, ground cover, lawn or turf that regularly is treated with fertilizer. But for those who feel more comfortable doing so, compost is a wise choice. It provides a slow but direct and steady release of nutrients back into the soil for intake for the barberry's roots.
rosebush brambles goatbush guajillo amargosa allthorn huisache barberry prickers
No, barberry bushes are not legal in Ontario, Canada. The shrub in question (Berberis thunbergii) number among the vegetation that inspire Bill 37, the Invasive Species Act. Since the passage of the bill's Third Reading on October 21, 2015, and receipt of the Royal Assent necessary for approval, the presence of barberry requires reporting to the Invasive Species Hotline since import and possession constitute intolerable acts.
Flowering almond, alpine currant, serviceberry, azalea, barberry, beautybush, lilac, butterfly bush and bridal veil spiraea are flowering bushes are ones that would grow in Minnesota.
Barberry is called "சம்பிராணி" in Tamil.
No, the cascade barberry is not edible.
The Urdu name for barberry is "Zereshk".
Leafminers
Berberis vulgaris.
At my house they are. My bushes are covered in them and they are most definitely eating the fruit. I am trying to find ways to get rid of them.
A barberry is a thorny shrub of the genus Berberis, which bears yellow flowers and red or blue-black berries.