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In a sense, it is odd that this tree is called the Japanese pagoda tree.
It can be isolated from Sophora japonica, the Japanese pagoda tree.
So do Turkish filbert and Japanese pagoda trees.
There is also the elegant Japanese pagoda tree, which is full of creamy flowers in late July.
This is certainly true of another spectacular performer, the Japanese pagoda tree (Sophora japonica).
Japanese pagoda tree blooms in late summer, with purple-tinged flowers followed by a crop of bean-like fruits.
It is overshadowed, literally if not figuratively, by an impressive Japanese pagoda tree with thick horizontal branches and leaves.
The Japanese pagoda tree "does well in city environments"; it tolerates temperature extremes and is "notably pest free."
Styphnolobium japonicum, known as the Japanese Pagoda Tree.
The major sources of rutin for medical use include buckwheat, Japanese pagoda tree, and Eucalyptus macrorhyncha.
Notable, too, is the exceptionally tough Japanese pagoda tree (Sophora japonica), which has white blossoms in summer.
Until recently, however, except for its London plane trees and Japanese pagoda trees, it looked more like a boomerang-shaped, half-acre wedge in the road.
Styphnolobium (Japanese pagoda tree)
Jimmie's Garden - rock daphne, hornbeam, weeping Nootka cypress, a Japanese pagoda tree, star magnolias, rhododendrons, perennial shrubs and flowers.
Last month, Sumiko Enbutsu of Tokyo helped the Friends of Van Voorhees Park plant a Japanese pagoda tree on the playground.
Japanese Pagoda Tree - Called the Chinese Scholar tree in English, this tree often appears as the backdrop for its namesake, Enju.
The Connecticut College Campus currently has 223 taxa of trees and numerous shrubs, including the Franklin tree, Japanese Pagoda Tree, seven-son flower, and Chinese witch-hazel.
Árbol de la Pagoda, Chinese Scholartree, Huai Hua, Japanese Pagoda Tree, Japanese Sophora, Sófora, Sophora japonica, Soppora Japonica, Styphnolobium japonicum.
It is found in China and its major host plant is Styphnolobium japonicum.
Styphnolobium japonicum, known as the Japanese Pagoda Tree.
Styphnolobium japonicum (I)
Styphnolobium japonicum (L.) Schott, the Pagoda Tree (Chinese Scholar, Japanese pagodatree; syn.
As well as the palms, these include a miniature oriental landscape featuring Styphnolobium japonicum "Pendulum" and Prunus, and a large Cycas revoluta.
(IGNATIUS BEAN) Stubwort (WOOD SORREL) Styphnolobium japonicum.
Árbol de la Pagoda, Chinese Scholartree, Huai Hua, Japanese Pagoda Tree, Japanese Sophora, Sófora, Sophora japonica, Soppora Japonica, Styphnolobium japonicum.
The city's largest park, the Garden of Rome, features some rare trees that are uncommon to the area, including Styphnolobium japonicum, native to East Asia (especially China); Pterocarya, also native to Asia; and Paulownia tomentosa, native to central and western China.
Styphnolobium japonicum is native to eastern Asia (mainly China, despite the name; it was introduced in Japan), is a popular ornamental tree in Europe, North America and South Africa, grown for its white flowers, borne in late summer after most other flowering trees have long finished flowering.