Hydrangea
(common name also Hydrangea; pronounced haidréind) is
a genus of about 70-75 species of flowering plants native to
southern and eastern Asia (from Japan to China, the Himalaya
and Indonesia) and North and South America. By far the greatest
species diversity is in eastern Asia, notably China and Japan.
Most are shrubs 1-3 m tall, but some are small trees, and others
lianas reaching up to 30 m by climbing up trees. They can be
either deciduous or evergreen, though the widely cultivated
temperate species are all deciduous.
Hydrangea
flowers are produced from early spring to late autumn; they
grow in flowerheads (corymbs or panicles) at the ends of the
stems. In many species, the flowerheads contain two types of
flowers, small fertile flowers in the middle of the flowerhead,
and large, sterile bract-like flowers in a ring around the edge
of each flowerhead. Other species have all the flowers fertile
and of the same size.

In most
species the flowers are white, but in some species (notably
H. macrophylla), can be blue, red, pink, or purple. In these
species the exact colour often depends on the pH of the soil;
acidic soils produce blue flowers, neutral soils produce very
pale cream petals, and alkaline soils results in pink or purple.
Hydrangeas are one of very few plants that accumulate aluminium.
Aluminium is released from acidic soils, and in some species,
forms complexes in the hydrangea flower giving them their blue
colour.

