Shrub 1 - 3 m tall Leaves: opposite, stalked, 5 - 20 cm long, 5 - 15 cm wide, egg-shaped to elliptic with a pointed tip and nearly heart-shaped to rounded base, toothed, hairless or slightly hairy beneath. Flowers: numerous, borne on a flat-topped to dome-shaped inflorescence 5 - 10 cm wide, changing from light green to white to brown, fertile throughout inflorescence or with some sterile flowers along margin, rarely completely sterile. The fertile flowers are small with tiny sepals and petals and ten stamens. Sterlie flowers with four white sepals about 1 cm across. Fruit: an elliptic capsule with blunt ends, eight- to ten-ribbed, opening to release very tiny seeds. Twigs: stout, grayish tan, shiny, usually unbranched, exfoliating with age. Buds: grenish brown, 0.3 - 1.9 cm long, with four to six scales.
Similar species: Hydrangea arborescens is easy to identify in the Chicago region with its opposite leaves, distinctive inflorescences, and unbranched twigs that exfoliate in the second year.
Flowering: June to August
Habitat and ecology: In the Chicago Region, this species has only been found at the edge of a sandstone bluff in Jasper County. Elsewhere in its native range, it often grows in rocky woods and hillsides.
Occurence in the Chicago region: native
Notes: 'Annabelle' is a commonly planted cultivar with very large, sterile flowers.
Etymology: Hydrangea comes fro the Greek words hydro, meaning water, and aggos, meaning jar, referring to the cup-shaped fruit. Arborescens means woody or tree-like growth.
Straggling shrub 1-3 m; lvs ovate-oblong to broadly round-ovate, acuminate, serrate, subcordate to acute at base, glabrous above; infl flat-topped or broadly convex, 5-10 cm wide, fertile throughout or with some marginal fls sterile or rarely wholly sterile (the wholly sterile form often cult.); pet 5, white, 3 mm; stamens 10; ovary inferior, with 2(3) carpels; sep of the sterile fls (3)4, subrotund, nearly 1 cm, white, reticulate-veined; seeds elliptic, with blunt ends; 2n=36. Dry or moist, often rocky woods and hillsides; s. N.Y. to O., Mo., and Okla., s. to Ga., La., and Ark. June, July. The widespread var. arborescens has the lvs glabrous or with only a few scattered hairs along the midrib beneath. The well marked var. discolor Ser. (var. deamii) occurring from c. Ind. and Ill. to N.C., Ga., and Okla., has the lvs ±densely pubescent beneath with minutely tuberculate hairs. The var. discolor might perhaps equally well be treated as a distinct, closely allied species, H. cinerea Small.
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.