Rhus copallinum

Common Name
Winged sumac
Shining sumac
Flameleaf sumac
Scientific Name
Rhus copallinum
Ground Cover
No
Evergreen
No
Plant Form
Shrubs & Small Trees
Max Height (ft)
25.0
Growth Rate
Medium
Region
Coastal
Piedmont
Mountain
Additional Info

Habitat: Dry, rocky woodlands and barrens, shale barrens, old fields, fencerows, roadsides, and early-successional forests. Common at lower elevations nearly throughout.

Wildlife Value: This plant provides nectar for pollinators. It is a larval host plant for Red-Banded Hairstreak. It is also a host plant for the Luna moth.  Butterflies and bees nectar at the flowers.  Its fruits are eaten by songbirds, white-tailed deer, opossums, wild turkey, and quail.  Its bark is eaten by rabbits. Plant NOVA Natives lists this species as particularly popular with the non-native honeybees
 

Notes: Glossy foliage, beautiful vivid red in the fall. Large mid-summer pale yellow blooms. Spreads slowly by suckers to form a colony (this can be controlled by weeding or mowing in the spring). Usually (but not always) two plants are needed for the female to produce the gorgeous berries

Light Requirements
Full sun
Partial sun
Moisture Requirements
Moist
Soil Texture
Clay
Loamy
Sandy
Shallow rocky
Grassland Species
No
Riparian Buffer Species?
No
Flower Color
Cream/White
Gold/Yellow
Green
Flower Prominence
Conspicuous
Bloom Time
Early Summer
Late Summer
Fall
Bloom Month
July
August
September
Fall Color
Burgandy/Red
Deer Resitant
No
Low Maintenance
No
Good Choice for Public Spaces
Yes
Seed or Fruit eaten by wildlife?
Yes
Supports Pollinators
Yes
Pollinators
Bees
Butterfiles