Home > Catalogue > Elaeagnus x ebbingei (E. x submacrophylla) 'Lannou' ELEADOR
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Illustrative photo.
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Elaeagnus × ebbingei (E. × submacrophylla) 'Lannou' ELEADOR evergreen silverthorn

size/type
medium-sized shrub
usual height
1,5-3m
usual width
1,5-2m
leaves
evergreen broadleaf
colour of leaves
+ combined: yellow a green
flowers
less showy but noticeable
blooming time
September-October
location
full to partial sun
soil type
any (acidic to alkaline)
soil moisture requirements
evenly moist (dislikes drought)
USDA zone (lowest)
6   (down to -23°C)
winter protection
 
for zone 5+6
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 5+6
for zone 7
Kód zimní ochrany zóna 7
mycorrhizal product
categorized

Elaeagnus

The genus Elaeagnusoleaster, belongs to the oleaster family and includes roughly ninety species distributed from south‑eastern Europe to Japan. It is an ancient group of woody plants, as shown by Tertiary fossils indicating that oleasters were once common even in regions where they no longer grow today. The whole genus is characterised by tiny scales on the leaves and young shoots, giving the plants a silvery or rusty sheen while protecting them from sun and drought. Oleasters also belong among the woody plants capable of supplying part of their own nitrogen: their roots host symbiotic bacteria of the genus Frankia, which can convert atmospheric nitrogen into a usable form. Thanks to this, oleasters thrive even in poor, sandy or windy soils where many other shrubs would struggle. The genus was first defined in 1700 by Joseph Pitton de Tournefort (1656–1708), one of the most important pre‑Linnaean systematists, professor of botany at the Jardin du Roi in Paris and author of the first truly functional plant classification system based on clearly defined genera. In his major work Éléments de botanique he separated oleasters from related genera and gave them the name Elaeagnus, later adopted and formally established by Carl Linnaeus.

Within the genus, some species can hybridise, and the most vigorous combination proved to be E. macrophylla crossed with E. pungens. From the first parent the hybrid inherited large, leathery, evergreen leaves, and from the second its notable toughness, resilience and ability to regenerate quickly after pruning. Botanically it is a stable, repeatedly occurring hybrid that appears naturally wherever the ranges of the two parent species overlap, and in cultivation it has become one of the most widely grown evergreen shrubs of the temperate zone.

The history of this hybrid, commonly called evergreen silverthorn, is intriguingly tangled and shows how differently botanical and horticultural naming can develop. The Swiss botanist Camille Servettaz (1870–1947) described in 1909 a plant with strikingly large leaves under the name Elaeagnus × submacrophylla, without realising at the time that it was a hybrid. She treated it as an unexplored taxon because it matched neither E. macrophylla nor E. pungens, yet clearly bore traits of both. Only later revisions revealed that her description precisely matched what we now recognise as the hybrid of these two species. Meanwhile, the horticultural world took a different path. The prominent Dutch botanist and breeder Simon Doorenbos (1891–1980) sowed in 1929 seeds of oleasters growing together in The Hague municipal nursery and among the seedlings found a plant that differed markedly from the rest. Realising its hybrid origin, he named it Elaeagnus × ebbingei in honour of his colleague J. W. E. Ebbinge. The name quickly caught on because Doorenbos’s plants spread through European nurseries and became the backbone of modern hedges in coastal and urban areas. Only modern studies showed that Doorenbos’s name does not have botanical priority, as Elaeagnus × submacrophylla had been published earlier and is therefore considered correct. Although botanical databases and gardens now use Servettaz’s name, the powerful horticultural trade continues to work with the traditional name E. x ebbingei, and it remains uncertain if or when it will shift to E. × submacrophylla.

Description of the plant

ELEADOR is a French variety of evergreen silverthorn with almost yellow leaves, margined dark green with light green highlights. They are leathery, but thinner than, for instance, those on cherry laurels which means fewer problems with water evaporation during cold winter months. As the emerge, they are a pale sandy beige and do not show their true colours until they reach a mature size in early summer. The undersides are silvery grey. But in winter, the colder it gets the deeper yellow they become, shining like a beacon in a sleeping garden. Young twigs start off orange-brown, gradually turning grey as they thicken and mature. They may occasionally have a few visible thorns, although some shrubs might completely lack them.

Apart from the foliage this plant is also interesting for its almost invisible but very fragrant flowers. They are tiny and appear from late summer to early autumn. They have a lovely, sweet perfume that is distributed especially on sunny and warm afternoons and evenings. They are followed by edible fruit in spring (April-May). The oval fruit, about 1,5cm long, is deep red and tastes like sweeter dark cherries. It is best to let them ripen fully, at which point they begin to fall. The plant can hold its fruit only after mild winters.

Growing conditions and care

Evergreen silverthorn is one of the toughest evergreen shrubs and thrives in almost any well‑drained soil – from sandy to loamy to stony, ideally with neutral to slightly alkaline pH. It grows best in full sun but also tolerates partial shade very well and will grow even in deeper shade, only becoming slightly looser. After planting it needs regular watering only for a few months to establish, and afterwards watering should be avoided completely – it is highly tolerant of drought and wind. It dislikes heavy, airless and permanently wet soil, where it becomes prone to problems and grows poorly. It tolerates pruning extremely well, with the best time being early spring before growth starts, and throughout the season you can shorten over‑long shoots without concern. Mulching with a 5–7 cm layer helps retain moisture, improves soil structure, supports density and protects against rapid winter temperature fluctuations. It is hardy to about –24 °C (USDA zone 6) and can withstand even a few degrees lower for short periods, with the risk of shoot tips freezing, but it regenerates very well in spring.

Last update 04-02-2008; 25-01-2012; 28-10-2024

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