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baygrape, seagrape, shore-grape, uva de playa

Habit Plants with branches spreading or sprawling, 2–7(–15) m.
Stems

bark gray, peeling off in small white, gray, or brown flakes, inner bark light brown;

twigs green and puberulent when young, gray at maturity, glabrous or pubescent.

Leaves

those of adventitious or juvenile shoots often much larger and of different shape from those of normal shoots;

ocrea persistent proximally, deciduous distally, brown or reddish brown, cylindric to funnelform, 3–8 mm, coriaceous proximally, membranous distally, margins oblique, glabrous or densely puberulent;

petiole 5–15 mm, puberulent to pilose;

blade pale green abaxially, green to bluish green adaxially, round to transversely elliptic, (6–)10–20(–27) × 6–20(–27) cm, length equaling or less than width, coriaceous, base cordate, margins sometimes revolute, apex rounded to blunt or emarginate, abaxial surface dull, adaxial surface shiny or dull, minutely punctate, glabrous.

Inflorescences

10–30 cm, puberulent or glabrous, pistillate pendent in fruit;

peduncle 1–5 cm, glabrous.

Pedicels

1–4 mm, glabrous.

Flowers

tepals round to broadly elliptic, margins entire, apex obtuse.

Staminate flowers

1–7 per ocreate fascicle.

Pistillate flowers

tube obpyriform, 12–20 × 8–12 mm, becoming fleshy.

Achenes

8–11 × 8–10 mm, shiny.

2n

= 132.

Coccoloba uvifera

Phenology Flowering year-round.
Habitat Sandy or rocky coastal hummocks, sand dunes. 0-10 m
Distribution
from FNA
FL; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies
[WildflowerSearch map]
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Coccoloba uvifera is an early colonizer of exposed, sandy shorelines. The wood has a specific gravity of 0.7, and a red sap obtained by cutting the bark has been used in commerce for tanning and dyeing (E. L. Little Jr. et al. 1969).

Pistillate inflorescences of some specimens of Coccoloba uvifera appear to bear clusters of up to five flowers at each node; all but one abort, leaving a single flower that produces a fruit. The pedicels of the abortive flowers usually are more slender than those of the fertile flowers.

(Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.)

Source FNA vol. 5, p. 484.
Parent taxa Polygonaceae > subfam. Polygonoideae > Coccoloba
Sibling taxa
C. diversifolia
Synonyms Polygonum uvifera
Name authority (Linnaeus) Linnaeus: Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 2: 1007. (1759)
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