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  1. Rosa arkansana, the prairie rose or wild prairie rose, is a species of rose native to a large area of central North America, between the Appalachian and Rocky Mountains from Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan south to New Mexico, Texas and Indiana.

  2. Learn about Rosa arkansana, a native shrub rose with fragrant white to pink flowers and red hips. Find out its hardiness, growth, care, and uses in the garden.

  3. Learn about prairie rose, a drought-tolerant shrub native to the prairie states of the U. S. and Canada, but introduced in New England. Find out its habitat, characteristics, distribution, and conservation status in the Northeast.

  4. Detailed Information. Flower: 1 to 4 flowers typically form at tips of new, ground shoots and occasionally at tips of second year lateral branches of older woody stems. Flowers are 1½ to 2 inches across with 5 broad, rounded petals with wavy edges often notched at the tip.

  5. Learn about the description, cultivation, range, habitat, and faunal associations of Prairie Rose, a small shrub with fragrant pink flowers and red hips. This native plant is similar to Pasture Rose, but has hairless stems and ovaries, and more persistent sepals.

  6. Rosa arkansana Porter. Family: Rosaceae. Common names: wild prairie rose. Synonyms: R. pratincola; R. suffulta var. suffulta and R. suffulta var. relicta. Shrub with erect stems to 1.5 ft (45 cm) tall. Twigs red-brown with many straight spines and bristles.

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  8. Rosa arkansana. Porter. A suckering shrub up to 3 or 4 ft high, in the wild often a subshrub cut to the ground each winter; stems clad with slender, straight prickles and bristles, sometimes very densely so.