
Wolf Berry. North America. This species has larger and more freely-produced flowers, and smaller fruit than the commonly-cultivated plant.
Snowberry. North America, 1817. One of the commonest shrubs in English gardens, with small, oval, entire leaves, and neat little racemes of pretty pink flowers, succeeded by the familiar snow-white berries, and for which the shrub is so remarkable.
Coral Berry, Common St. Peter's Wort. North America, 1730. This is readily distinguished by its showy and freely-produced coral berries. There is a very neat and much sought after variety, having conspicuous green and yellow leaves, and named Symphoricarpus vulgaris foliis variegatis.
The Snowberries are of no great value as ornamental shrubs, but owing to their succeeding well in the very poorest and stoniest of soils, and beneath the shade and drip of trees, it is to be recommended that they are not lost sight of. They grow and spread freely, and are therefore useful where unchecked and rampant shrub growth is desirable.

• Opposite is a flowering shrub picture.
• Information about the Symphoricarpus flowering shrubs.
• There are many flowering shrubs in the flowering shrub section.
• There are shrub pictures in the flowering shrub pictures gallery.
• The Symphoricarpus is a flowering shrub.
• Flowering shrubs and bushes.