Sinobambusa tootsik (Makino) Makino ex Nakai

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Credits

Article from Bean's Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles

Recommended citation
'Sinobambusa tootsik' from the website Trees and Shrubs Online (treesandshrubsonline.org/articles/sinobambusa/sinobambusa-tootsik/). Accessed 2026-06-07.

Family

  • Poaceae

Genus

Synonyms

  • Arundinaria tootsik Makino
  • Bambusa tootsik Sieber

Other taxa in genus

    Glossary

    ciliate
    Fringed with long hairs.
    included
    (botanical) Contained within another part or organ.
    lanceolate
    Lance-shaped; broadest in middle tapering to point.
    linear
    Strap-shaped.
    pruinose
    Covered with a waxy bloom (as found on a plum).
    truncate
    Appearing as if cut off.

    References

    There are no active references in this article.

    Credits

    Article from Bean's Trees and Shrubs Hardy in the British Isles

    Recommended citation
    'Sinobambusa tootsik' from the website Trees and Shrubs Online (treesandshrubsonline.org/articles/sinobambusa/sinobambusa-tootsik/). Accessed 2026-06-07.

    Editorial Note

    Treated by Bean under the synonym Arundinaria tootsik. See the genus entry on Arundinaria for a general discussion of hardy bamboos and their cultivation.

    A bamboo of tufted habit, spreading by short rhizomes; stems cylindrical, up to 25 ft high and up to 3 or 4 in. thick, dark green, smooth, with at first prominent, hairy joints, pruinose below them, thick-walled; branches three at a joint, much divided and slender above; stem-sheaths soon falling, tough, sparsely hairy, or smooth and hairless except for a dense, conspicuous band of golden-brown or dark brown hairs at the base, narrowed upward and truncate at the tip, bearing there a linear or linear-lanceolate, sharply pointed blade, and two lateral auricles fringed with long, rigid, smooth bristles. Leaves clustered; blades narrowly lanceolate, 2 to 8 in. long, 13 to 114 in. wide, very finely pointed, narrowed at the base, green, with four to eight pairs of secondary nerves, prominently tessellate; leaf-sheaths ciliate, their terminal auricles fringed with rather long, rigid, erect bristles.

    Native of China but long cultivated in Japan, where it is used as a hedge plant and for ornamental purposes. It is said to be a troublesome weed in Honolulu, dominating many acres of once native vegetation. It is distinguished from other species formerly included in Arundinaria by the dense band of brown hairs at the joints of the stems and bases of the sheaths. It is cultivated in the Temperate House at Kew and would only be suitable for the open in the mildest districts.