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Harlequin glorybower

Harlequin glorybower

Clerodendrum trichotomum
A large, suckering deciduous shrub or small multi-stemmed tree native to China, Japan, Korea and Taiwan (and reported east to the Philippines), grown for its intensely fragrant white star-flowers in late summer — each cradled in a green calyx that flushes crimson as the season turns — followed by startling turquoise-blue berries against a vivid red star. It delivers one of the most theatrical autumn displays in the garden and draws bees, butterflies and moths to its late nectar. The honest catch is a relentless suckering habit: established plants send up a spreading thicket of root shoots that must be pulled or mown season after season, and in the warmer parts of its cultivated range it can self-seed enough to be treated as locally invasive.
Climate fit: narrow (30/100)
Focal point
Pollinator
Border
Light
Full sun / Part sun
Water
Moderate water
Mature size
120-240" tall · 120" apart
Hardy in zones
7a-10b
cold to mild winters
Native in Illinois
No
Wikipedia notes that the flowers are 'not self-pollinating, so at least two plants are needed to produce fruit.' Plant two or more specimens within pollinator flight distance for the turquoise-blue fruit display; a single isolated plant will bloom freely but set little or no fruit.

Cold hardiness

These values are location-based: this location's current hardiness is the baseline, and the 2050 value is a projected future climate for this same location.
Now
Zone 6b
Plotwright
USDA Zone 6b
-5°F to 0°F
Won't grow here
Zone 7a
Plotwright
0°F to 5°F
Marginal
In plain terms: This location has cold winters. Its winters are projected to keep warming through 2050.
✕→⚠
Out of range today, but marginally possible by 2050.

Heat tolerance

Heat tolerance values are location-based too: heat days today are observed at this site, and the 2050 value projects this same location under a future climate.
Loading AHS heat-zone data for this location...

Plant this, not that

Better fit for this place
For Chicago, IL, these are replacement suggestions: similar plants with a stronger hardiness fit now and/or in 2050.
Heptacodium miconioides
Seven-son flower
Seven-son flower is a fast-growing deciduous shrub or small multi-stemmed tree native to cliffs and forest margins in Anhui and Zhejiang provinces of eastern China, where only about nine wild populations survive (IUCN Vulnerable). In gardens it earns its keep through an unusually long ornamental season: fragrant white flowers open in September, then the petals drop and the calyces swell and flush deep pinkish-red through October-November, extending the display well into autumn. The honest catch is size: it is genuinely vigorous and will reach 15-20 ft (4.5-6 m) in a decade, making it unsuitable for small gardens unless committed to hard annual renewal pruning - and its spreading, suckering root system can colonize several feet beyond the canopy over time.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Border
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Spiraea thunbergii
Thunberg Spirea
Thunberg spirea is a fine-textured, arching deciduous shrub native to East China and Japan, among the earliest spireas to flower — its slender stems are smothered in clusters of small white flowers in late winter to early spring, often before the narrow willow-like leaves fully emerge. In a sunny, well-drained border it is tough, fast to establish, and carries RHS Award of Garden Merit status. The honest catch is allelopathy: the roots and litter release cis-cinnamoyl glucosides and cis-cinnamic acid, compounds that measurably suppress germination and growth of nearby plants — avoid planting into a densely seeded wildflower mix or close-spacing with shallow-rooted perennials.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 4a-8b
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Viburnum plicatum
Doublefile viburnum
Doublefile viburnum is a deciduous shrub native to China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan, grown for its spectacular tiered, horizontal branching draped in flat lacecap flower heads in late spring. It earns its place as a four-season focal point — white flowers in May, blue-black drupes in late summer, and often vivid red-purple autumn colour — but the honest catch is its sheer footprint: mature plants can spread 4–5 m wide with rigidly horizontal branches that resent hard pruning, and the fruit is not edible.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Structure
Border
Pollinator
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Viburnum carlesii
Koreanspice viburnum
Viburnum carlesii is a slow-growing deciduous shrub native to Korea, the Japanese island of Tsushima, and adjacent parts of southeastern China, prized above almost all shrubs for its intoxicatingly spiced spring fragrance — dense, rounded clusters of pink buds open to white flowers with a cinnamon-clove perfume that carries across an entire garden. It settles into a tidy, broadly rounded habit of 4-6 ft and adds a secondary season of interest through red fruits that ripen to bluish-black in autumn, taken readily by birds. The honest catch is the rootstock: most retail plants are grafted onto Viburnum lantana, which throws vigorous suckers from below the graft union; if those suckers are not removed promptly, the coarser, unscented rootstock will eventually crowd out the named cultivar entirely.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 4a-7b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Border
Pollinator
Structure
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited

Similar plants

Browse lateral options with similar roles, light needs, size, or native-range overlap; these are not filtered for a better climate fit.
Heptacodium miconioides
Seven-son flower
Seven-son flower is a fast-growing deciduous shrub or small multi-stemmed tree native to cliffs and forest margins in Anhui and Zhejiang provinces of eastern China, where only about nine wild populations survive (IUCN Vulnerable). In gardens it earns its keep through an unusually long ornamental season: fragrant white flowers open in September, then the petals drop and the calyces swell and flush deep pinkish-red through October-November, extending the display well into autumn. The honest catch is size: it is genuinely vigorous and will reach 15-20 ft (4.5-6 m) in a decade, making it unsuitable for small gardens unless committed to hard annual renewal pruning - and its spreading, suckering root system can colonize several feet beyond the canopy over time.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Border
Tecoma capensis
Cape honeysuckle
Cape honeysuckle (Tecoma capensis, syn. Tecomaria capensis; Bignoniaceae) is a vigorous, evergreen scrambling shrub native to southern and south-central Africa — from the Cape Provinces north through KwaZulu-Natal, Mozambique, Malawi, Tanzania, DR Congo, and Angola — valued for long, slender orange-to-apricot tubular flowers borne erratically across much of the year and attractive to nectar-feeding sunbirds. It reaches 2–3 m tall and wide as a free-standing mound, or considerably taller trained on a wall or trellis, and has received the RHS Award of Garden Merit. The honest catch is its frost-tenderness (barely survives to about 5°C; RHS H1C, roughly USDA 9b–11) combined with an invasive streak in mild climates: it suckers freely, self-layers, and has naturalised on the Azores and across coastal eastern Australia, so it must only be sited where its spread can be actively managed.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 9b-11
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Container
Tecomaria capensis
Cape honeysuckle
Cape honeysuckle (Tecomaria capensis, Bignoniaceae) is a vigorous, evergreen scrambling shrub from southern and south-central Africa, valued for tubular orange-to-apricot flowers borne erratically across much of the year. It reaches about 2-3 m tall and wide as a free-standing shrub, or can be trained much taller on a trellis or wall, and is widely used for informal hedging and as a hot-color border or container plant. It is frost-tender (RHS H1C; roughly USDA 9b-11) — in cooler climates it is grown under glass or as a summer container plant and overwintered indoors. In frost-free, mild climates it can become weedy: it has naturalised and is treated as invasive in parts of Australia and on islands such as the Azores, so site it where suckering and self-layering can be managed. It is not a recognised edible and is not flagged as notably toxic, though several plant parts feature in traditional southern-African medicine; treat it as ornamental rather than for consumption. Note the accepted binomial here is Tecomaria capensis (POWO/GBIF); the widely-seen Tecoma capensis is a synonym.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 9b-11
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Container
Viburnum plicatum
Doublefile viburnum
Doublefile viburnum is a deciduous shrub native to China, Korea, Japan, and Taiwan, grown for its spectacular tiered, horizontal branching draped in flat lacecap flower heads in late spring. It earns its place as a four-season focal point — white flowers in May, blue-black drupes in late summer, and often vivid red-purple autumn colour — but the honest catch is its sheer footprint: mature plants can spread 4–5 m wide with rigidly horizontal branches that resent hard pruning, and the fruit is not edible.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Structure
Border
Pollinator
Viburnum carlesii
Koreanspice viburnum
Viburnum carlesii is a slow-growing deciduous shrub native to Korea, the Japanese island of Tsushima, and adjacent parts of southeastern China, prized above almost all shrubs for its intoxicatingly spiced spring fragrance — dense, rounded clusters of pink buds open to white flowers with a cinnamon-clove perfume that carries across an entire garden. It settles into a tidy, broadly rounded habit of 4-6 ft and adds a secondary season of interest through red fruits that ripen to bluish-black in autumn, taken readily by birds. The honest catch is the rootstock: most retail plants are grafted onto Viburnum lantana, which throws vigorous suckers from below the graft union; if those suckers are not removed promptly, the coarser, unscented rootstock will eventually crowd out the named cultivar entirely.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 4a-7b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Border
Pollinator
Structure
Syringa × persica
Persian lilac
Persian lilac (Syringa × persica) is a compact deciduous lilac (Oleaceae) of uncertain hybrid origin, thought to arise from a cross between Syringa × laciniata and S. afghanica; it has been cultivated in European gardens for centuries and carries no confirmed wild native range (Wikipedia). Growing 4–8 ft tall and spreading 5–10 ft wide with gracefully arching branches, it produces abundantly fragrant pale-lilac panicles in spring and tolerates more warmth than common lilac (USDA zones 4a–7b per NC State Extension; some sources extend the warm edge to zone 9). The honest catch is powdery mildew: this lilac is highly susceptible and must be sited with excellent air circulation and pruned to an open centre, or the mid-summer foliage will be heavily disfigured — a near-certainty in humid, sheltered spots. (Note: this is the Oleaceae lilac, NOT the toxic Melia azedarach that shares the name.)
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 4a-7b
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure

Educator packet

Plant packet
Harlequin glorybower educator packet
A large, suckering deciduous shrub or small multi-stemmed tree native to China, Japan, Korea and Taiwan (and reported east to the Philippines), grown for its intensely fragrant white star-flowers in late summer — each cradled in a green calyx that flushes crimson as the season turns — followed by startling turquoise-blue berries against a vivid red star. It delivers one of the most theatrical autumn displays in the garden and draws bees, butterflies and moths to its late nectar. The honest catch is a relentless suckering habit: established plants send up a spreading thicket of root shoots that must be pulled or mown season after season, and in the warmer parts of its cultivated range it can self-seed enough to be treated as locally invasive.
Scientific name
Clerodendrum trichotomum
Plant type
shrub
Hardiness
7a-10b
Light
full-sun, part-sun
Moisture
moderate
Spacing
120 inches
Classroom prompts
- Which plant traits are observations, and which are care recommendations?
- How would this plant fit change if the garden location moved warmer, colder, wetter, or drier?
- Which source-backed facts would you cite in a lesson handout?
Use the Sources & citations section below for page citation styles and the field-level source list.

Sources & citations

Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or research that uses this page. To cite a single upstream fact instead, use its specific source listed below.
Plotwright. (2026, May 17). Harlequin glorybower (Clerodendrum trichotomum). Retrieved 2026, June 30, from https://plotwright.com/plants/clerodendrum-trichotomum
Sources for every fact
Every fact on this page traces to a source. 18 fields cited - 18 source-backed.
RHS Find a Plant
Botanical research database
Backs 17 fields
Identity
Summary
Plant type
Light
Moisture
Hardiness
Heat zone
Size
Spacing
Habit
Design roles
Seasonal interest
Growth stages
Lifecycle
Regional guidance
Success tips
Designer notes
Wikimedia Commons
Photo · CC BY-SA 4.0
Backs 1 field
Image
GBIF
Botanical research database
Wikipedia (ecoregion articles)
Botanical research database