Shade-loving plants include: Huashan pine, Liaodong fir, white pole, green pole, spruce, hosta, octagonal golden plate, rhododendron, juniper, magnolia, ingot maple, five-cornered maple, and cotinus. , Lingxiao, hawthorn, pearl plum, rhombus spirea, heather, Jiaodong Euonymus, big-leaf boxwood, small-leaf boxwood, buckthorn, red Duanmu, clove, four seasons osmanthus, gold and silver wood, Tianmu Qionghua, barberry, crape myrtle, Figs, peonies.
Deer, wegweed, rhododendron, Ophiopogon japonicus, buffalo grass, bermudagrass, orange grass, hosta, February flower, five-leaf brocade, silk cotton wood, buckthorn , Schisandra chinensis, Schisandra chinensis, etc.
Classification of shade tolerance
The shade tolerance of young plants is an important issue in silviculture. Japanese fir, beech, sycamore, podocarpus, etc. are highly shade tolerant; pine, larch, birch, etc. are weakly shade tolerant; oak, hairy ash, maple, oak, etc. are moderately shade tolerant. Generally, tree species with strong shade tolerance (shade trees) receive at least a small amount of light and form a dense crown.
Like Japanese fir and Hokkaido spruce, the life span of leaves can be several years or even more than 10 years, and only part of the leaves are replaced every year, so they are more tolerant to shade than trees with short-aged leaves. Herbaceous plants also have strong and weak shade tolerances. Those with weak shade tolerance will have difficulty growing in the dark. In water or forest, depending on its height (depth), you can see changes in various biological species along the shade-tolerant sequence.