Culture
Easily grown in average, medium moisture, well-drained soils in full sun to part shade. Some tolerance for full shade, but foliage often grows best in sun with some afternoon shade. Tolerates a wide range of soils, but prefers rich, moist, humusy ones. Best with consistent watering. Established plants have some drought tolerance. Best fruiting occurs when grown in groups. Single specimens may fruit poorly. This shrub is evergreen in the warm winter climates of USDA Zones 8-10. In the St. Louis area, it is considered to be semi-evergreen to deciduous because plants will typically lose their foliage (become deciduous) as soon as winter temperatures dip below 10°F., with the stems sometimes dying to the ground. Plants are not reliably winter hardy to the St. Louis area, and if grown therein, should be sited in protected locations with organic winter mulches applied.
Noteworthy Characteristics
Nandina domestica, commonly called heavenly bamboo, is a broadleaf evergreen shrub that is ornamentally grown for its interesting foliage and its often spectacular fruit display. It is native to Japan, China and India. This is a rhizomatous, upright, evergreen shrub that typically grows to 4-8’ tall and to 2-4’ wide. In St. Louis, it is semi-evergreen to deciduous, and typically grows shorter since the stems often will die to the ground in winter. Although it belongs to the Barberry family, it is commonly called heavenly bamboo because its erect, cane-like stems and compound leaves resemble bamboo. Tiny whitish flowers with yellow anthers appear in late spring in loose, erect, terminal clusters. Flowers are followed by sprays of spherical, two-seeded, red berries which persist from fall to spring, providing winter interest.
Heavenly bamboo tends to invade adjacent lands including certain forested areas of the southeastern United States and naturalize therein. It is now considered to be an invasive species in some southern states. Additionally, the berries of Nandina domestica have been linked to toxicity in cedar waxwing birds.
Genus name is the Latinized form of the Japanese name of this plant
Nanten.
Specific epithet means domesticated.
'Lemon-Lime' was discovered in 2004 by Richard E. Davis in Locustville, Virginia. It was chosen from a population of plants grown from the seeds of open-pollinated
Nandina domestica `Aurea`. Introduced by Plants Nouveau of Charleston, North Carolina, it is a member of the Southern Living® Plant Collection. 'Lemon Lime' has short leaf internodes resulting in a very compact plant. Its new growth and outer foliage are chartreuse and contrast with the green of mature inner foliage. It grows 3 to 4 ft. tall and wide and rarely flowers. United States Plant Patent PP#24,749 awarded August 12, 2014.
Problems
No serious insect or disease problems. Foliage may develop chlorosis in alkaline soils. Considered invasive in some areas. Check local laws and recommendations before adding this plant to your landscape.
Uses
Plant form, foliage, fall color make this an interesting ornamental for the landscape. Group or mass for best effect. Shrub borders or open woodland gardens. Foundations. Good in informal settings. Can be used as an informal hedge in warm winter climates where it remains evergreen and does not die to the ground.