ODNR Division of Forestry Rugosa Rose

America's forestry movement actually started in Ohio with the creation of the American Forestry Association in Cincinnati in 1875.


Lisa Bowers, (614) 728-4210
Program Administrator

Division of Forestry
2045 Morse Rd.
Building H1.
Columbus, OH 43229

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Rugosa Rose (Rosa rugosa)


A deciduous shrub from the Rose Family (Rosaceae)

 
2-7
10'
30'
medium
full sun to part shade
upright
prefers moist, alkaline adaptable

Rugosa Rose was introduced to the United States long ago from the Orient, where it is native to Japan, Korea, and China. It has long since escaped from cultivation, although new hybrid roses with Rugosa Rose as a parent continue to be developed.

Rugosa Rose has three tremendous advantages over other roses: it is very cold hardy, it grows on its own roots, and it is very tolerant of salt spray. Its flowers may be single or double, and occur in various shades of white, pink, rose, lavender, and purple.

Its fruits called "hips" are large and showy, and are sometimes not deadheaded when in cultivation, but rather left on the shrub for added ornamental appeal from late summer through early winter. The arching, suckering growth habit is often vigorous, and this rose may be used as a formal (sheared) or informal (unpruned) barrier hedge.

Mature individual specimens may reach 6 feet high and 10 feet wide, although it is often planted as a group, row, or mass planting. As a member of the Rose Family, it is related to a number of fruit trees, brambles, and ornamentals, in addition to the multitude of Roses that exist.

Planting Requirements - Rugosa Rose prefers moist, well-drained, organic soils of slightly acidic pH, but is extremely adaptable to poor soils composed of sand, clay, rocks, and other non-organic components, of acidic, neutral, or alkaline pH. It does not like wet soils, and it thrives under salt spray and other polluted conditions. It can grow in zones 2 to 7, in full sun to partial sun.

Potential Problems - Like all Roses, Rugosa Rose can suffer from a number of diseases including black spot, stem canker, and viruses and pests including borers, aphids, mites, and especially Japanese Beetle. Regular fertilization and spraying programs for other roses will suffice for Rugosa Rose as well.


Leaf Identification Features

The medium to dark green leaves of Rugosa Rose are alternate and pinnately compound, with five to seven leaflets that are oblong, serrated, and with impressed veins.


Other Identification Features

Flowers of Rugosa Rose are often single flowering (having a row of petals around the edge, but none in the center as is typical of modern hybrid roses) and moderately fragrant.

Floral colors include red, pink, lavender, and white, and may also be semi-double or double-flowering (having petals throughout the middle of the flower).

Rugosa Rosa is noted more than any other rose for its exceptionally large, bright red or orange-red fruits, known as hips. These ripen throughout the summer and are often retained into autumn and winter.

Twigs of Rugosa Rosa are laden with plentiful thorns, which may be curved or straight. Since this rose is more cold-hardy than just about any other, pruning is optional for this shrub rose, and its branches are often allowed to gracefully arch and develop a spreading form.

Rugosa Rose is often planted as an informal border hedge including at roadways, where it is tolerant of winter salt spray and salt water runoff, where it is allowed to grow unpruned.