- 'Black Satin', 'Chester
Thornless', 'Dirksen
Thornless', 'Hull
Thornless', 'Loch Maree', 'Loch Ness', 'Loch Tay', 'Merton
Thornless', 'Smoothstem', and 'Triple...
- clusters. The
thorns are
modified branches and
occasionally sprout leaves.
Thornless forms are
occasionally found growing wild and are
commonly available as...
-
Euphorbia geroldii commonly called Gerold's
Spurge or
Thornless Crown of
Thorns a
species of
plant in the
family Euphorbiaceae. It is
endemic to Madagascar...
- Cotoneaster, but have
serrated leaf
margins and
numerous thorns (Cotoneaster is
thornless). The
plants reach up to 4.5 m (15 ft) tall.
Leaves are
small and oval...
- wild
blackberry known by the
English common name
elmleaf blackberry or
thornless blackberry and the
Spanish common name zarzamora. It is
native to Europe...
- idaeus var. strigosus.
Recent breeding has
resulted in
cultivars that are
thornless and more
strongly upright, not
needing staking.[citation needed] The black...
-
generally in
habitats that have
limited competition from
other plants. A
thornless shrub with a
restrained climbing habit,
reaching at most 2 m (7 ft), and...
-
vigorously to 6 m (20 ft) tall.
Unlike most roses, it is
practically thornless,
though it may bear some
prickles up to 5 mm long,
particularly on stout...
- cell that is
genetically thorny.
Thornless blackberry is a chimera, with the
epidermal layers genetically thornless but the
tissue beneath it genetically...
- ripens, but it is
universally sold
while still green. The tree is
nearly thornless. The
fruit is
about 6
centimetres (2+1⁄2 inches) in diameter,
often with...