Ribes alpinum

Alpine Currant

Saxifragaceae

Expand

Habitat

  • native to Europe
  • hardy to zone 2

Habit and Form

  • a deciduous shrub
  • twiggy adn dense
  • 3' to 6' tall
  • equally wide or greater
  • upright stems
  • medium texture
  • moderate growth rate

Summer Foliage

  • deciduous leaves in an alternate arrangement
  • simple leaves
  • 3 to 5 lobed leaves
  • ovate leaf shape
  • 1" to 2" long
  • dentate leaf margins
  • truncate leaf base
  • pubescent
  • bright green leaf color

Autumn Foliage

  • yellow fall color
  • not ornamentally important

Flowers

  • dioecious
  • greenish-yellow flowers
  • blooms in April
  • borne in 1" to 2" long racemes
  • not ornamentally important

Fruit

  • a red berry
  • 0.33" in diameter
  • produced in July; only on female plant
  • rarely seen

Bark

  • exfoliating chestnut brown stems

Culture

  • readily translanted
  • soil adaptable
  • full sun is best
  • tolerates shade
  • can be rejunvenated with heavy pruning
  • prune anytime

Landscape Use

  • hedge plant
  • massing or groupings

Liabilities

  • anthracnose
  • can blight
  • leaf spot
  • rusts
  • currant aphids
  • scale
  • currant bud mite

ID Features

  • stalked, large, imbricate, grayish-tan buds
  • ridged leaf scar
  • red fruit
  • greenish-yellow flowers

Propagation

  • by softwood cuttings
  • by seed

Cultivars/Varieties

'Aureum' - This is an old cultivar with yellow foliage that develops best in sun. The intensity of the color may diminish in summer.

'Europa' - Growing to 8' tall, this is a densely branched plant that bears handsome foliage.

'Green Mound', 'Nana', 'Compacta', and 'Pumila' - These are all dwarf forms that generally grow to form dense shrubs to 3' tall.

'Spreg' (Green Jeans™) - Notable for its good leaf retention, this 3'-5' tall plant has healthy leaves all season.

© Copyright Mark H. Brand, 1997-2015.

The digital materials (images and text) available from the UConn Plant Database are protected by copyright. Public use via the Internet for non-profit and educational purposes is permitted. Use of the materials for profit is prohibited.

Citation and Acknowledgements: University of Connecticut Plant Database, http://hort.uconn.edu/plants, Mark H. Brand, Department of Plant Science and Landscape Architecture, Storrs, CT 06269-4067 USA.