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|exposure=part-sun, shade
 
|exposure=part-sun, shade
 
|sun_ref=Flora - A Gardener's Encyclopedia ISBN 0881925381
 
|sun_ref=Flora - A Gardener's Encyclopedia ISBN 0881925381
|features=flowers
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|features=flowers, houseplant
 
|flower_season=early fall, mid fall, late fall
 
|flower_season=early fall, mid fall, late fall
 
|flower_ref=Flora - A Gardener's Encyclopedia ISBN 0881925381
 
|flower_ref=Flora - A Gardener's Encyclopedia ISBN 0881925381
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|max_zone=11
 
|max_zone=11
 
|image=X Fatshedera lizei2.jpg
 
|image=X Fatshedera lizei2.jpg
|image_width=240
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|image_width=200
 
}}
 
}}
 
×'''''Fatshedera lizei''''' ({{pron-en|fætsˈhɛdərə}})<ref>''Sunset Western Garden Book,'' 1995:606–607</ref> is an inter-generic [[Hybrid (biology)|hybrid]] of [[flowering plant]]s, commonly known as '''tree ivy''' or '''aralia ivy'''. It was created by hybridizing ''[[Fatsia japonica]]'' 'Moserii' (Moser's Japanese Fatsia, the seed parent) and ''[[Hedera helix]]'' (Common Ivy, the pollen parent) at the [[Lizé Frères]] tree nursery at [[Nantes]] in [[France]] in 1912. Its generic name is derived from the names of the two parent genera.
 
×'''''Fatshedera lizei''''' ({{pron-en|fætsˈhɛdərə}})<ref>''Sunset Western Garden Book,'' 1995:606–607</ref> is an inter-generic [[Hybrid (biology)|hybrid]] of [[flowering plant]]s, commonly known as '''tree ivy''' or '''aralia ivy'''. It was created by hybridizing ''[[Fatsia japonica]]'' 'Moserii' (Moser's Japanese Fatsia, the seed parent) and ''[[Hedera helix]]'' (Common Ivy, the pollen parent) at the [[Lizé Frères]] tree nursery at [[Nantes]] in [[France]] in 1912. Its generic name is derived from the names of the two parent genera.
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The plant combines the [[shrub]]by shape of ''[[Fatsia]]'' with the five-lobed leaves of ''[[Ivy|Hedera]]''. As a shrub, Fatshedera can grow up to 1.2&nbsp;m tall, above which the weight of the fairly weak branches makes them tend to bend over. It can however also be tied to a support and grow into a [[vine]] up to 3-4&nbsp;m tall; unlike ''Hedera'', it does not readily climb without assistance. The [[leaf]] blades are 7-25&nbsp;cm long and broad, with a 5-20&nbsp;cm petiole. The [[flower]]s are 4-6&nbsp;mm diameter, yellowish-white, produced in late autumn or early winter in dense [[umbel]]s; they are [[infertility|sterile]] and do not produce any fruit.
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The plant combines the [[shrub]]by shape of ''[[Fatsia]]'' with the five-lobed leaves of ''[[Ivy|Hedera]]''. As a shrub, Fatshedera can grow up to 1.2 m tall, above which the weight of the fairly weak branches makes them tend to bend over. It can however also be tied to a support and grow into a [[vine]] up to 3-4 m tall; unlike ''Hedera'', it does not readily climb without assistance. The [[leaf]] blades are 7-25 cm long and broad, with a 5-20 cm petiole. The [[flower]]s are 4-6 mm diameter, yellowish-white, produced in late autumn or early winter in dense [[umbel]]s; they are [[infertility|sterile]] and do not produce any fruit.
   −
It is grown both as a [[garden]] plant outdoors, and as a [[houseplant]] indoors, where its tolerance of shady conditions is valued. Inside they will grow well in bright indirect light. Outdoors, it can tolerate winter temperatures down to −15&nbsp;°C, but can also be grown successfully indoors with temperatures never falling below 20&nbsp;°C. Several [[cultivar]]s have been selected, with dark green to variously white- or yellow-[[variegation|variegated]] leaves.
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It is grown both as a [[garden]] plant outdoors, and as a [[houseplant]] indoors, where its tolerance of shady conditions is valued. Inside they will grow well in bright indirect light. Outdoors, it can tolerate winter temperatures down to −15 °C, but can also be grown successfully indoors with temperatures never falling below 20 °C. Several [[cultivar]]s have been selected, with dark green to variously white- or yellow-[[variegation|variegated]] leaves.
    
==Cultivation==
 
==Cultivation==

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