Club5050 | Beautiful Photography Of Red Roses | By @zeemooo
Red Rose
Most rose species are native to Asia, with some native to North America and some to Europe and northwest Africa. Roses from different regions of the world hybridize easily, giving rise to species that overlap parental forms, making it difficult to determine the parent species. Fewer than 10 species, mostly from Asia, were involved in crossbreeding that eventually produced many of today's garden rose varieties.
Roses are erect, climbing or trailing shrubs, whose stems are usually armed with thorns of various shapes and sizes, commonly called thorns. The leaves are alternate and pinnately compound (ie, pinnate), usually with ovate leaflets that are sharply toothed. Wild rose flowers typically have five petals, while cultivated rose flowers are often double (ie, with multiple sets of petals). Rose flowers range from 1.25 cm (0.5 in) in diameter to hybrid flowers measuring over 17.5 cm (7 in). The fleshy, sometimes edible, berry-like "fruit" (actually the flower cup) of the rose plant is known as the hip and is usually red to orange in color.
There are several major classes of garden roses. The most famous and popular class of roses are hybrid tea roses, which are the majority of roses grown in greenhouses and gardens and sold in flower shops. Hybrid teas come in a full range of rose colors and have large, shapely flowers. Hybrid teas are the result of breeding perennial roses with vigorous, repeat-blooming but delicate tea roses. Hybrid Perpetuals became so popular that they were replaced by hybrid teas in the early 20th century. Polenta roses are a class of hardy roses that produce dense clusters of small flowers. Floribunda roses are hardy hybrids that result from crossing hybrid teas with polyanthus.
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