The Allegheny Highlands forests stretch across the Allegheny Plateau of Pennsylvania and New York, a hilly landscape of deeply cut river valleys, waterfalls, and—in the glaciated New York portion—the Finger Lakes. Under a cold temperate climate, pre-settlement forests were dominated by hemlock-white pine-northern hardwoods, with eastern hemlock and beech most abundant alongside sugar maple, red maple, birch, white ash, and black cherry. Eastern hemlock, the ecoregion's flagship species, is now declining across much of the region due to the introduced hemlock woolly adelgid, while over-abundant white-tailed deer suppress forest regeneration.
RESOLVE 328
Nearctic
28,229 sq mi
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Landscape type
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Plant region
Nearctic
Region footprint
28,229 sq mi
Habitat pressure
Nature Could Reach Half Protected (Dinerstein NNH 2)
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Use this as the broad planting pattern for the region: Four-season forests of deciduous hardwoods — oak, maple, beech — often mixed with conifers, shaped by warm summers and cold winters. Trees leaf out in spring and color in autumn; the generally fertile soils have made these forests heavily settled and farmed. For garden decisions, pair that context with the plant list below, then narrow by your site's light, water, soil, and mature-size constraints.
°C
°F
Range & origins
Marker placed inside the RESOLVE 2017 polygon at 42.0°N, 76.7°W.
Region through time
Modern footprint
RESOLVE 2017 maps 28,229 sq mi
This boundary is a modern ecological footprint for Allegheny Highlands forests, not a permanent line on the planet. It is useful for today's plant and wildlife context because it follows recurring vegetation, climate, landform, and disturbance patterns.
Why here
temperate broadleaf & mixed forests conditions
The region sits in the Nearctic realm and is classed as temperate broadleaf & mixed forests. Elevation, moisture, fire, soils, coasts, and human land use can all make the real landscape more varied than a single map color suggests.
Change pressure
Nature Could Reach Half Protected
Plotwright shows this as the current RESOLVE footprint. Over decades to centuries, warming, disturbance, invasive species, land use, and restoration can move the living edge of a region even when the reference map stays fixed.
Climate zones
USDA zone range (now)
5b-6b
USDA
What seed packets and nursery tags reference. Coldest-day survival semantics.
Plotwright projection (2041–2070)
9a-9b
Plotwright
Where the winter climate trajectory points by mid-century.
Heat zones
Loading AHS heat-zone data for this region marker point...
Average warming this ecoregion is on track for: +7.2°F by mid-century. Current-trajectory scenario · climate data sampled across 10 of 10 points within this ecoregion's bounding box.
Plants that can handle this region
A climate-fit shortlist from Plotwright's catalog. Start with the reliable fits, then use each plant page to check light, water, soil, mature size, and local availability.
Showing 314 of 314 climate-fit plants for this region.
Reliable climate fits
Good bets for now and later
296 plants
These plants fit the region today and stay within range under the mid-century projection. Start here when you want choices with the least climate regret.
Yucca filamentosa
Adam's needle
A virtually stemless, broadleaf-evergreen native of central and eastern North America: a basal rosette of rigid, sword-shaped, spine-tipped leaves up to 30 inches long, fringed along the margins with the curly white threads that give the species its name. In early summer a flowering stalk shoots from the center to 5-8 feet, carrying nodding, bell-shaped, creamy-white flowers. Tough enough for poor sandy soil, heat, drought, and salt spray, it earns its keep as architectural structure in dry and seaside gardens.
Shrub
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 5a-10b
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 5a-10b
Climate: broad
Structure
Focal point
Border
+3
Structure
Focal point
Border
Tagetes erecta
African marigold
A tall, bold warm-season annual from Mexico and Guatemala (the "African" name is a misnomer of its European garden history) grown for large, fully double, pompon-like flowerheads in saturated yellow, gold, and orange over strongly aromatic, finely divided foliage. Plants reach 12-48 inches and bloom from early summer to frost in full sun. The petals are edible and used as a culinary garnish and natural dye, and the flowers are the iconic "flor de muerto" of Mexican Day of the Dead. Despite the wide listed zone range it is frost-tender and grown for a single warm season.
Annual
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 2a-11b
Climate: moderate
+5
Annual
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 2a-11b
Climate: moderate
Border
Focal point
Container
Pollinator
+4
Border
Focal point
Container
Pollinator
Rubus allegheniensis
Allegheny blackberry
A native eastern + central North American thicket-forming shrub producing arching thorny canes + clusters of large sweet black berries in mid-to-late summer. Among the most important wildlife fruit producers in eastern forests — birds, mammals, + insects all depend on the fruit. Like raspberry, biennial-caned (primocane year 1, fruits in year 2 as floricane, then dies back). Spreads via root suckers + tip-rooting cane tips; manage with annual pruning.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: broad
Edible
Pollinator
Structure
+3
Edible
Pollinator
Structure
Pachysandra procumbens
Allegheny spurge
A native Southeastern North American semi-evergreen woodland groundcover (Pachysandra procumbens), prized for its blue-green to bronze mottled leaves and fragrant white-to-pinkish bottlebrush flower spikes that open at ground level in late winter to early spring. Unlike the widely planted invasive Asian Pachysandra terminalis, this native spreads slowly by rhizomes into well-behaved clumping colonies, making it a low, restrained groundcover for shaded native plantings.
Perennial
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: moderate
+5
Perennial
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: moderate
Border
Filler
+2
Border
Filler
Thuja occidentalis
American arborvitae
A dense, conical-to-narrow-pyramidal evergreen tree native to eastern and central North America, prized as a screening and foundation conifer. Flat, fan-like sprays of scale-like, aromatic yellow-green foliage clothe the tree from the ground up, and red-brown bark exfoliates on mature trunks. Wild trees can reach 40-60 feet but cultivated plants typically stay near 20-30 feet; small urn-shaped cones and dense evergreen cover make it valuable food and shelter for birds.
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 2a-7b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 2a-7b
Climate: broad
Structure
Focal point
Border
+3
Structure
Focal point
Border
Tilia americana
American basswood
A medium-to-large native shade tree of central and eastern North America, reaching 50-80 feet with an ovate-rounded crown and large, asymmetric heart-shaped leaves. In June it carries pale-yellow, intensely fragrant flowers on pendulous cymes — each cluster hung from a distinctive strap-like leafy bract — that ripen into pea-sized nutlets. The fragrant June bloom is a premier nectar source: Missouri Botanical Garden lists it as attracting bees and butterflies, and the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags it as having special value to both native and honey bees.
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 2a-8b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 2a-8b
Climate: broad
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
+3
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
Castanea dentata
American chestnut
Once the dominant canopy hardwood of the eastern United States forest — an estimated four billion trees, prized for fast growth, rot-resistant timber, and an enormous annual crop of sweet edible nuts that fed people, livestock, and wildlife alike. In the early 1900s an introduced Asian fungus, chestnut blight (Cryphonectria parasitica), swept through and functionally destroyed it: by the 1950s the species was effectively extinct as a mature forest tree. Surviving root systems still send up sprouts from old stumps, but the blight almost always girdles and kills them before they can grow large enough to flower and reproduce. The honest reality for a gardener is that you cannot reliably grow a mature wild-type American chestnut today. The realistic paths are blight-resistant backcross hybrids from The American Chestnut Foundation or transgenic blight-tolerant lines still being deployed — not a pure wild seedling, which the blight will almost certainly kill.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
Structure
Focal point
Edible
+3
Structure
Focal point
Edible
Sambucus canadensis
American elderberry
A fast, suckering native shrub of streambanks and moist thickets across eastern North America, grown for huge flat-topped cymes of tiny lemon-scented white flowers in early summer and the clusters of dark elderberry drupes that follow. Spreads by root suckers into naturalized colonies 5-12 feet tall and wide; the flowers feed butterflies and the showy fruit feeds birds. The raw berries are not eaten fresh — they are cooked into jelly, pie, and wine.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 3-9
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 3-9
Climate: broad
Structure
Edible
Pollinator
Focal point
+4
Structure
Edible
Pollinator
Focal point
Teucrium canadense
American germander
American germander, also called wood sage, is a widespread North American native perennial in the mint family that runs steadily underground on creeping rhizomes. From early to midsummer it sends up erect, softly hairy stems topped with one-sided spikes of pale pink-to-lavender flowers, each with the distinctive deeply lobed lower lip that gives the germanders their look and makes a generous landing platform for bees. It is a plant of moist open ground - wet meadows, streambanks, ditches, and the edges of thickets - across most of the contiguous United States into southern Canada, which tells you exactly what it wants: sun and a soil that does not dry out. The honest caveat is its vigor: those same rhizomes that fill a bank or a rain garden so readily will also colonize a tidy perennial border and crowd politer neighbors. Site it where it can run, or give it a root barrier, and it rewards you with a long, dependable bee-friendly bloom rather than a maintenance fight.
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: moderate
+5
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: moderate
Pollinator
Filler
+2
Pollinator
Filler
Corylus americana
American hazelnut
A rounded, multi-stemmed deciduous shrub native across eastern and central North America, grown for its edible nuts and its season-opening catkins. Showy 2-3 inch yellowish-brown male catkins dangle from bare branches in early spring before the ovate, double-toothed leaves emerge; small egg-shaped edible nuts ripen inside leafy husks by mid- to late summer. Easygoing in average soil and tolerant of clay and black walnut, it suckers into thickets that screen and shelter wildlife.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: broad
Structure
Edible
Pollinator
+3
Structure
Edible
Pollinator
Ilex opaca
American holly
The only native U.S. holly with both spiny green leaves and bright red berries — an upright, pyramidal, broadleaf evergreen tree that slowly matures to 15-30 feet in cultivation (to 50 feet in the wild). Thick, leathery, deep green leaves bear spiny marginal teeth, and pollinated female trees carry showy red-to-orange drupes that ripen in fall and persist through winter as bird food. This is the classic "Christmas holly" of wreaths and decorations.
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
Pollinator
+3
Focal point
Structure
Pollinator
Ostrya virginiana
American hophornbeam
A small-to-medium understory tree of dry, rocky eastern-North-American woods, named for its drooping clusters of papery, sac-like seed pods that resemble the fruit of hops. The birch-like, sharply-serrated leaves turn an undistinguished yellow in fall, and reddish-brown male catkins persist on the bare branches through winter. Also called ironwood for its extremely hard, dense wood; tough, low-maintenance, and drought-tolerant once established.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: broad
Structure
Focal point
+2
Structure
Focal point
Diospyros virginiana
American persimmon
A tough, medium-sized native tree of the eastern and midwestern United States, grown as much for its showy edible orange fruit as for its distinctive thick, dark gray bark broken into rectangular blocks. Small urn-shaped white-to-greenish-yellow flowers open in May and June, and the sweet fruit ripens after frost. Largely dioecious — a female tree needs a male pollinizer nearby to set fruit — and notably drought- and walnut-tolerant once established.
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
Edible
Pollinator
+4
Focal point
Structure
Edible
Pollinator
Prunus americana
American plum
A small native deciduous tree (or thicket-forming, suckering shrub) of eastern and central North America, grown for clouds of fragrant white 5-petaled flowers that open in March before the leaves and for the edible red plums that follow in early summer. It forms a broad, spreading crown with attractive dark reddish-brown twigs that sometimes carry thorny lateral branchlets. A documented larval host for swallowtails and other butterflies, with flowers of special value to native, bumble, and honey bees.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
Pollinator
+3
Focal point
Structure
Pollinator
Rubus idaeus
American red raspberry
A native bramble (cane) producing red aromatic edible fruit in summer or fall (depending on summer-bearing vs everbearing cultivar). Self-pollinating; spreads vigorously by root suckers + tip-rooting canes. NC State documents extensive Lepidoptera + small mammal + bird wildlife value alongside the edible fruit role. Site where the spreading habit is welcome — naturalized colonies form in sun-exposed open ground.
Shrub
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 4a-8b
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 4a-8b
Climate: broad
Edible
+1
Edible
Liquidambar styraciflua
American sweetgum
A native canopy tree of eastern North American forests with iconic star-shaped 5-lobed leaves displaying outstanding red-purple-orange fall color, distinctive corky wing-bark on twigs, and spiky round seed pods that famously litter lawns ("gumballs"). The seed pods are the design-defining drawback — Liquidambar is rarely planted in formal landscapes for this reason. Choose seedless cultivars ('Rotundiloba', 'Slender Silhouette') for residential planting.
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
+2
Focal point
Structure
Platanus occidentalis
American sycamore
A massive native deciduous canopy tree of eastern North American floodplain forests producing distinctive mottled white-tan-gray exfoliating bark (the design-defining trait — sycamore bark looks like military camouflage), large palmate maple-like leaves, and persistent spherical seed balls. Among the largest deciduous trees in eastern North America — old-growth specimens exceed 150 feet tall + 10 feet trunk diameter. Site only where massive scale is acceptable.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 4a-9b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
+2
Focal point
Structure
Agastache foeniculum
Anise hyssop
An upright, clump-forming perennial of the mint family native to the upper Midwest, Great Plains, and into central Canada, named for its anise-scented foliage. From June through September it carries dense terminal spikes of lavender-to-purple two-lipped flowers above square stems and opposite, toothed leaves. The Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center flags it as a nectar source with special value to native bees, bumble bees, and honey bees, and it also draws butterflies and hummingbirds.
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 4a-8b
Climate: moderate
+5
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 4a-8b
Climate: moderate
Pollinator
Border
Edible
+3
Pollinator
Border
Edible
Hydrangea arborescens
Annabelle hydrangea
A native eastern-US deciduous shrub — 'Annabelle' is a sterile-flowered cultivar of smooth hydrangea — with very large white snowball blooms in summer. Blooms on new wood so spring frost cannot destroy the flower display, and serves as the larval host for the hydrangea sphinx moth.
Shrub
Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: broad
Focal point
Structure
+2
Focal point
Structure
Malus domestica
Apple
The domesticated orchard apple — a deciduous Rosaceae tree grown for its showy, edible fruit and fragrant April blossom of five white-to-pink petals around a ring of yellow stamens. Not native to North America (the genus Malus spans Europe, Asia, and North America, but the cultivated apple is an Old World hybrid lineage). Almost all varieties are self-incompatible: a second, different apple cultivar blooming at the same time must be nearby for fruit to set, and trees are grown on dwarf, semi-dwarf, or standard rootstocks that decide final size.
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
Edible
Focal point
Structure
+3
Edible
Focal point
Structure
Prunus armeniaca
Apricot
A small deciduous Rosaceae fruit tree grown for its golden-orange, red-blushed drupes — fragrant, showy, edible, and ripening in summer. Fragrant white flowers (pink in bud) open in early spring before the foliage, two weeks ahead of peaches. That early bloom is also its weakness: the flowers are extremely susceptible to frost injury, so apricots are notoriously hard to crop reliably outside sheltered sites.
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 5a-8b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Edible
Structure
+3
Focal point
Edible
Structure
Symphyotrichum oblongifolium
Aromatic aster
A native central + eastern US perennial with intensely aromatic foliage when crushed and dense clouds of small blue-purple flowers in late fall — often the latest-blooming aster in the eastern flora. Drought + clay tolerant; among the toughest native fall pollinator plants.
Perennial
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: broad
+5
Perennial
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 3a-8b
Climate: broad
Pollinator
Border
+2
Pollinator
Border
Viburnum dentatum
Arrowwood viburnum
A native eastern + central North American multi-stemmed deciduous shrub with dentate (toothed) foliage, white spring flower clusters, blue-black drupes, and reliable fall color. Especially valued for wildlife — among the most-cited native shrubs for fall-migration bird forage.
Shrub
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 2a-8b
Climate: broad
+5
Shrub
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 2a-8b
Climate: broad
Structure
Pollinator
Border
+3
Structure
Pollinator
Border
Eruca vesicaria
Arugula
A fast cool-season annual of the mustard family grown for its peppery, mustard-like salad greens — irregular, pinnately-lobed basal leaves in a low rosette, each with 4 to 10 small lateral lobes and a large terminal lobe (Missouri Botanical Garden). First cultivated by the ancient Greeks and Romans and still widely grown across Europe, it is best grown in the cooler spring and fall months rather than summer heat; leaves are harvested young and tender before they turn strong and bitter. Pale-yellow four-petalled flowers with dark brown or purple veins appear in corymbs if plants are left to bloom.
Vegetable
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 2-11
Climate: moderate
+5
Vegetable
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 2-11
Climate: moderate
Edible
Container
+2
Edible
Container
Showing 24 of 296 plants. Search above to narrow the list.
Good now, not later
Good now, less certain later
4 plants
These plants fit the region as it is today. The projection moves them outside their listed range, so treat them as shorter-horizon or higher-care choices.
Apium graveolens var. dulce
Celery
A cool-season biennial vegetable in the carrot family (Apiaceae), grown as an annual for its crisp, edible ribbed leaf stalks. Apium graveolens is native to temperate Mediterranean Europe, Asia, and Africa — not North America. It demands rich, consistently moist soil and steady cool temperatures (60-75°F); heat and drought turn the stalks stringy and bitter, which is why it is one of the more finicky garden vegetables.
Vegetable
Full sun
Consistent moisture
Zones 3a-6b
Climate: narrow
+5
Vegetable
Full sun
Consistent moisture
Zones 3a-6b
Climate: narrow
Edible
+1
Edible
Pseudotsuga menziesii
Douglas fir
A very large Pacific Northwest conifer — 40-80 feet in cultivation but topping 300 feet in the wild — and one of the most important timber trees in North America. Unique forked, trident-shaped cone bracts that protrude between the scales distinguish it from every other conifer. Flat, spirally-arranged dark green needles are fragrant when bruised and leave raised circular scars on the twigs.
Tree
Full sun
Consistent moisture
Zones 4-6
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun
Consistent moisture
Zones 4-6
Climate: narrow
Structure
Focal point
+2
Structure
Focal point
Populus tremuloides
Quaking aspen
The most widely distributed tree in North America — a slender, cool-climate deciduous tree famous for nearly round leaves on flattened stalks that flutter ("quake") in the lightest breeze and turn brilliant golden yellow in fall. Smooth greenish-white bark whitens to chalky white with black warty patches as it ages. In the wild, aspens grow in clonal groves rising from one shared root system, so an entire grove can be a single genetic individual, all male or all female.
Tree
Full sun
Consistent moisture
Zones 1a-6b
Climate: broad
+5
Tree
Full sun
Consistent moisture
Zones 1a-6b
Climate: broad
Structure
Focal point
+2
Structure
Focal point
Asarum canadense
Wild ginger
A native eastern North American clump-forming deciduous perennial with heart-shaped foliage and hidden ground-level maroon flowers (pollinated by ground-dwelling beetles + flies). Forms dense colonies via rhizomes. Aromatic rhizome was historically used as a ginger substitute by Indigenous peoples + colonial settlers (true ginger is unrelated tropical Zingiber).
Perennial
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 4a-6b
Climate: narrow
+5
Perennial
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 4a-6b
Climate: narrow
Filler
+1
Filler
Future climate matches
Likely better as winters warm
14 plants
These plants are not the best current fit, but the mid-century projection moves this region toward their comfort range.
Diospyros kaki
Asian persimmon
A deciduous Eastern-Asian fruit tree with a rounded, spreading crown that the Missouri Botanical Garden lists at 20-30 feet tall and wide. Oval leaves emerge yellowish-green, mature to glossy green, and turn gold to red in fall; fragrant but insignificant late-spring flowers give way to showy orange persimmons (3-4 inches) that ripen in late fall and may persist on bare branches into winter. Winter hardy to USDA Zones 7-10 and drought tolerant once established.
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Structure
Edible
+3
Focal point
Structure
Edible
Umbellularia californica
California bay laurel
A handsome, intensely aromatic broadleaf evergreen tree native to coastal California and southwestern Oregon, where it grows from a dense, rounded shade tree of 30-75 feet down to a multi-stemmed large shrub on harsher sites. The narrow, glossy, dark-green leaves are richly scented — crush one and the pungent, spicy oil is unmistakable — and small clusters of pale yellow-green flowers in late winter and early spring give way to round, olive-like fruit that ripens from green to purple. It is one of the most fragrant trees of the West Coast and a tough, drought-adapted evergreen for zones 7-9, but it carries two important cautions: the oils are strong enough to earn it the nickname 'headache tree,' and it is a major foliar host and reservoir for Phytophthora ramorum, the pathogen behind Sudden Oak Death, so it should not be planted near oaks or tanoaks in affected regions.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
Structure
Focal point
Edible
+3
Structure
Focal point
Edible
Camellia japonica
Camellia
A broadleaf evergreen shrub from Japan, China, and Korea, grown for showy 3-5 inch winter-to-spring flowers in white, pink, red, yellow, and lavender against glossy, leathery, dark green leaves. The most widely cultivated camellia, with thousands of named varieties and a single straight-species form whose broad overlapping petals surround a dense boss of golden-yellow stamens. Winter hardy only to USDA zones 7-9, it needs moist, acidic, organically rich soil and the shelter of part shade.
Shrub
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
+5
Shrub
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Structure
+2
Focal point
Structure
Dahlia (hybrid)
Dahlia
A tuberous-rooted member of the aster family native to Mexico and Central America, grown for showy summer-to-fall blooms in nearly every color except blue. Hybrids in commerce span ten flower-form groups (single, anemone, collarette, waterlily, decorative, fall, pompon, cactus, semi-cactus, and miscellaneous) and range from 1 to 6 feet tall. Winter-hardy only to USDA Zones 7-10; in colder regions the tubers are lifted in fall and stored frost-free, so most North American gardeners grow it as a summer annual.
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
+5
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Border
Container
Pollinator
+4
Focal point
Border
Container
Pollinator
Cedrus deodara
Deodar cedar
A graceful, large evergreen conifer from the western Himalayas, prized as a specimen for its broadly pyramidal form, gently nodding leader, and sweeping branches whose tips droop in soft, weeping curtains. Slender blue-green to gray-green needles are borne in dense whorled clusters on short spurs, and barrel-shaped upright cones sit on the upper branches, ripening from blue-green to reddish-brown and disintegrating on the tree. In the landscape it typically reaches 30-50 feet (with much greater potential in age and ideal sites), needs real room to spread, and is the most heat- and warmth-tolerant of the true cedars — thriving in zones 7-9 where spruce and fir falter, but it does want good drainage and is not a small-garden tree.
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Structure
+2
Focal point
Structure
Gladiolus (hybrid)
Gladiolus
The classic "sword lily" of the summer cut-flower garden — a corm-grown hybrid (commonly designated Gladiolus × hortulanus) descended from at least eight mostly South African species. Sword-shaped leaves rise in upright fans below a one-sided spike of funnel-shaped blooms that open bottom-to-top in nearly every color but true blue. Showy and fragrant but not winter-hardy outside zones 7-10: in colder gardens the corms are lifted and stored frost-free.
Perennial
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
+5
Perennial
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Border
+2
Focal point
Border
Cynara scolymus
Globe artichoke
A Mediterranean thistle relative grown as a perennial vegetable for its large, unopened flower bud — the edible "globe" of overlapping fleshy bracts harvested before bloom. It forms an upright clump of deeply lobed, jagged silver-green leaves, with flower stalks rising to 3-5 feet. Left unharvested, the buds open to spectacular violet-blue thistle flowers up to 7 inches across that are a magnet for bees.
Vegetable
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7-10
Climate: narrow
+5
Vegetable
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7-10
Climate: narrow
Edible
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
+4
Edible
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
Pinus palustris
Longleaf pine
A long-lived, fire-dependent pine of the Southern Coastal Plain, once the dominant tree across tens of millions of acres of open, grassy pine savanna from Virginia to east Texas. It is named for its very long (8-18 inch) needles, which grow in bundles of three and give the tree a distinctive open, tufted look, and for its large 6-10 inch cones. Longleaf is famous for its multi-year "grass stage": for several years after germination a seedling looks like a clump of grass, putting energy into a deep taproot and a fire-resistant bud at ground level before it ever shoots upward. That makes it slow to establish but exceptionally storm-, drought-, and fire-tolerant once grown. This is a large restoration and landscape conifer, not a quick ornamental — plant it for the long term.
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7b-9b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7b-9b
Climate: narrow
Structure
Focal point
+2
Structure
Focal point
Cornus nuttallii
Pacific dogwood
The western counterpart of eastern flowering dogwood — a small deciduous tree of the Pacific coast with horizontal, tiered branching and a rounded-to-conical crown. Its showy spring "flowers" are actually a tight central cluster of tiny purple-green true flowers ringed by six large white petal-like bracts (eastern flowering dogwood has four). Elliptic dark green leaves color yellow to orange to red in fall, and the 1/3-inch fruits ripen to showy bright red or orange that feed songbirds, squirrels, and deer.
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
+5
Tree
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Structure
+2
Focal point
Structure
Agave parryi
Parry's agave
A rosette-forming evergreen succulent native to the grasslands, desert scrub, and pinyon-juniper woodlands of Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and northern Mexico at 4,000-8,000 feet. Thick, rigid blue-gray leaves with toothed margins and a one-inch terminal spine form a dense, symmetrical basal rosette to about 2 feet tall by 3 feet wide. Surprisingly cold-hardy for a succulent — reliably hardy to USDA Zone 7 and reported to survive -20F as long as the cold is dry rather than wet. Each rosette flowers only once, after 10-30 years, sending up a single 20-foot stalk before dying and leaving its rooted offsets behind.
Perennial
Full sun
Low water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: moderate
+5
Perennial
Full sun
Low water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: moderate
Focal point
Structure
Container
+3
Focal point
Structure
Container
Rhododendron austrinum
Piedmont azalea
A tall, erect, multi-stemmed native deciduous azalea of the lower southeastern United States, prized for clouds of intensely fragrant golden-yellow to apricot-orange tubular flowers that open in early to mid spring just as the leaves emerge. One of the more heat- and humidity-tolerant native azaleas, it forms an open, upright shrub 8-10 feet tall that reads as a small flowering tree in maturity. It wants part shade, acidic humus-rich soil, and consistent moisture; like every Rhododendron, all parts are toxic if eaten.
Shrub
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
+5
Shrub
Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
+3
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Antirrhinum majus
Snapdragon
The classic cottage-garden snapdragon — named for its hinged, two-lipped "dragon-mouth" blooms that snap open when pinched at the sides. A tender perennial native to southwestern Europe, hardy in USDA Zones 7-10 but grown almost everywhere as a cool-season annual, carrying tall spikes of white, yellow, pink, red, orange, peach, or purple flowers from spring to frost. Hummingbirds and butterflies work the blooms, and the cut spikes are a cutting-garden staple.
Perennial
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
+5
Perennial
Full sun
Moderate water
Zones 7a-10b
Climate: narrow
Border
Container
Pollinator
+3
Border
Container
Pollinator
Verbena bonariensis
Tall verbena
An airy, see-through ornamental in the vervain family (Verbenaceae), native to South America and naturalized across the warm southeastern United States. NC State Extension describes an erect plant 2-5 feet tall on thin but strong red-marked green stems, topped from summer into fall by dense, flat-topped clusters of small tubular purple-lavender flowers held well above mostly basal, lance-shaped, serrated dark-green leaves. A perennial in USDA zones 7-11 (grown as an annual in colder climates), it is fast-growing, drought and deer tolerant, and a magnet for bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds — though it self-sows freely and some sources have labeled it invasive.
Perennial
Full sun / Part sun
Low water
Zones 7a-11b
Climate: moderate
+5
Perennial
Full sun / Part sun
Low water
Zones 7a-11b
Climate: moderate
Border
Pollinator
Filler
Structure
+4
Border
Pollinator
Filler
Structure
Heteromeles arbutifolia
Toyon
The signature evergreen shrub of the California chaparral and coastal foothills — leathery, sharply toothed dark-green leaves, flat-topped clusters of small white summer flowers, and the brilliant red pomes that earned it the names Christmasberry and California holly (and, by way of the Hollywood hills, supposedly the name "Hollywood"). Long-lived and deeply drought-tolerant; the winter berries feed more than twenty bird species when little else is fruiting.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 7a-11b
Climate: moderate
+5
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 7a-11b
Climate: moderate
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
+3
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
Planting collections
Finished planting recipes where every member can handle this region's climate range. The fit badge uses the collection's most sensitive plant, so a resilient collection is a safer starting point than any single standout.
Climate-resilient · 2 plants
Bright shade foundation
A part-shade planting with shrub structure and low foliage contrast.
Annabelle hydrangea
Coral bells
+2
Annabelle hydrangea
Coral bells
+4
Climate-resilient · 8 plants
Climate-resilient natives for warming zones (eastern NA)
A pollinator-supporting palette of eastern North American natives with broad hardiness ranges and wide native distributions. Built for gardeners who want a planting that can handle warming zones without giving up wildlife value.
Switchgrass
Little bluestem
Common milkweed
Black-eyed Susan
Wild bergamot
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Cutleaf coneflower
New England aster
+8
Switchgrass
Little bluestem
Common milkweed
Black-eyed Susan
Wild bergamot
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Cutleaf coneflower
New England aster
+5
Climate-resilient · 9 plants
Native pollinator border (eastern US)
A continuous-bloom native pollinator strip for eastern North America. Covers spring through frost with host + nectar plants spanning monarchs, native bees, hummingbirds, and specialist Lepidoptera. Little bluestem provides the matrix grass + Hesperiidae host.
Butterfly weed
Common milkweed
Purple coneflower
Wild bergamot
Scarlet bee balm
Little bluestem
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Swamp sunflower
Smooth blue aster
+9
Butterfly weed
Common milkweed
Purple coneflower
Wild bergamot
Scarlet bee balm
Little bluestem
Sweet Joe-Pye weed
Swamp sunflower
Smooth blue aster
Climate-resilient · 4 plants
Sunny pollinator border
A durable sunny border with summer bloom, seedheads, and upright winter texture.
English lavender
Purple coneflower
Black-eyed Susan
Switchgrass
+4
English lavender
Purple coneflower
Black-eyed Susan
Switchgrass
Similar planting regions
Browse other regions with a similar hot, dry-summer rhythm. Their plant lists can suggest species and combinations worth comparing.
RESOLVE 329 - Nearctic
Appalachian mixed mesophytic forests
The Mixed Mesophytic — the most species-diverse temperate hardwood forest in North America — covers the Cumberland Plateau and adjacent unglaciated dissected uplands of West Virginia, eastern Kentucky, southern Ohio, southwestern Virginia, and eastern Tennessee. Sugar maple, American beech, tulip poplar, yellow buckeye, basswood, and white ash share cove-forest canopies with more than two dozen co-dominant species — a richness inherited from being ice-sheet-free during the Pleistocene.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9a-11a
+5.6°F by 2070
70,054 sq mi
Editorial profile
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 331 - Nearctic
Appalachian-Blue Ridge forests
The Blue Ridge province — the eastern spine of the southern Appalachians from southern Pennsylvania through northern Georgia. Cove hardwoods on protected slopes, oak-hickory mid-slope, northern hardwoods + spruce-fir on the highest peaks (Mt. Mitchell to 6,684 ft). Long the eastern US's wettest non-coastal region; many endemic plants tied to perched coves.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 9a-12b
+5.4°F by 2070
63,065 sq mi
Editorial profile
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 332 - Nearctic
East Central Texas forests
The East Central Texas forests form a long, narrow temperate broadleaf and mixed forest ecoregion of roughly 52,600 km², lying almost entirely within Texas with a small extension into southeastern Oklahoma, between the eastern Piney Woods and the western prairies. Its signature landscape is the Post Oak Savanna over gently rolling terrain, dominated by post oak and blackjack oak alongside eastern redcedar and black hickory, with the Bastrop Lost Pines holding the westernmost stands of southern pine in the U.S. The climate is humid subtropical to warm temperate, with hot summers, mild winters, and annual rainfall of about 740–1,120 mm. Heavily converted to ranching and farmland, the ecoregion is considered critically fragmented: only about 1% is protected, and it shelters the endangered Houston toad and Attwater's prairie chicken.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 10b-12b
+4.0°F by 2070
21,550 sq mi
NNH tier 4
RESOLVE 333 - Nearctic
Eastern Canadian Forest-Boreal transition
The Eastern Canadian Forest-Boreal transition is the broad east-west band between the northern hardwoods of New England-Acadian forests and the boreal black-spruce taiga to the north — covering much of southern Quebec, central New Brunswick, and the Ontario / Quebec near-boreal interior. Sugar maple, yellow birch, balsam fir, white spruce, and white birch are the canopy mix; the line between hardwood-dominant south and conifer-dominant north shifts visibly across the ecoregion. The region carries one of the highest projected mid-century warming signals in the temperate Western Hemisphere.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 6b-8b
+10.2°F by 2070
122,775 sq mi
Editorial profile
NNH tier 2
RESOLVE 334 - Nearctic
Eastern Great Lakes lowland forests
The Eastern Great Lakes lowland forest belt — the Lake Ontario / upper St. Lawrence / Lake Erie basin from southern Ontario and Quebec south into New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and eastern Michigan. Sugar maple, beech, hemlock, and northern hardwoods dominate; lake-effect snow and humid summers buffer extremes near the shorelines. Garden-relevant for the long migratory bird and pollinator corridor along the lake margins.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 7a-9a
+8.6°F by 2070
50,065 sq mi
Editorial profile
NNH tier 4
RESOLVE 335 - Nearctic
Gulf of St. Lawrence lowland forests
The Gulf of St. Lawrence lowland forests cover the maritime lowlands around the Gulf — Prince Edward Island, the Acadian and northern New Brunswick coast, Nova Scotia's low-elevation interior, the Magdalen Islands, the southern coast of the Gaspé, and adjacent Quebec lowlands. Mixed Acadian forest of balsam fir, red spruce, yellow birch, sugar maple, and white pine; maritime moderation softens the continental temperature extremes felt one ecoregion inland.
Temperate Broadleaf & Mixed Forests
Zones 7b-8b
+8.8°F by 2070
13,961 sq mi
Editorial profile
NNH tier 2
National refinement sub-regions
Within this RESOLVE ecoregion, national agencies recognise finer-grained sub-regions. Plotwright assigns each sub-region polygon to its containing RESOLVE polygon by centroid.
EPA Level III (US-only) - 2 sub-regions
60 · Northern Allegheny Plateau
62 · North Central Appalachians
Source: USGS / EPA via Omernik (1987).
Sources & citations
Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or regional planting notes that use this Plotwright page. To cite the underlying ecoregion framework or a specific editorial profile, use the source cards below.
Plotwright. (n.d.). Allegheny Highlands forests (Allegheny Highlands forests). Retrieved 2026, June 14, from https://plotwright.garden/regions/resolve-328
Sources for this region
This page cites Plotwright first for the compiled view, then lists the upstream framework, climate, and editorial source pages so readers can cite the original material directly.
RESOLVE 2017 Terrestrial Ecoregions (Dinerstein et al.)