Multiflora Rose
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Multiflora Rose | ||||||||||||||||
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Missing image Rosa-multiflora2.jpg Multiflora Rose Rosa multiflora | ||||||||||||||||
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Multiflora Rose, or Rosa multiflora, is a scrambling rose species native to eastern Asia, but which has been extensively planted as a soil conservation plant in the eastern United States, where it has become an out-of-control invasive exotic species, causing severe environmental and economic damage. The plant forms impenetrable thickets which are severely detrimental to nearby crop growth and livestock. It is readily distinguished from native roses in the U.S. by its flower or seed heads, which bear multiple flowers and hips, often more than a dozen, while the native species bear only one or a few on a branch.
Because of its invasive nature and vicious thorns, some people have started to jokingly refer to this plant as "MF rose".
Rosa_mulitflora_berries.jpg