It is an evergreen shrub[3] mostly growing in maquis or in sheltered valleys [citation needed]. Its distribution encompasses mainland Greece, some Aegean islands (including Crete), the Adriatic coast of the Balkans, Italy, the islands in the Western Mediterranean, some coastal areas of the Iberian peninsula and France (up to 700 m in the Maritime Alps, and northwards up to the southernmost parts of Brittany), in the north of Morocco and Algeria, and in more isolated instances in the Atlas Mountains and in European Turkey.[4][1]
Description
Rosa sempervirens leaves are glossy, compound-pinnate and evergreen. It is a bushy shrub that can reach 1.5 meters high, growing in hedges or forming thickets. Climbing forms can reach 3.5 m in height. The stems bear few, slightly curved prickles.
The imparipinnate leaves generally have five leaflets, sometimes seven. The leaflets, lanceolate oval, shiny on their upper surface, glabrous, with tight edges, are 2 to 5 cm long. These relatively leathery, dark green leaves persist much of the winter.
The white, simple, slightly fragrant flowers, 3 to 5 cm in diameter, are grouped together in sparse corymbs. They bloom in spring and early summer from May to July, or in spring and early summer. The fruits, globular or ovoid, orange-red when ripe, are about 1 cm long.
^Tchertoff, Barbara (12 January 2019). "Antoine Jacques part I". Historicroses.org. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
^Tutin, Thomas Gaskell, ed. (1968). Flora Europaea. Vol. 2 – Rosaceae to umbelliferae. Cambridge University Press. ISBN052106662X.
^Kurtto, Arto; Lampinen, Raino; Junikka, Leo (2004). Atlas florae Europaeae, distribution of vascular plants in Europe. 13: Rosaceae (Spiraea to Fragaria, excl. Rubus). Helsinki: Committee for mapping the flora of Europe and Societas Biologica Fennica. p. 40. ISBN978-951-9108-14-8.