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dogwood

Habit Herbs, shrubs, or trees, clonal from rhizomes, rooting from decumbent branches, or aclonal; hairs 1-celled, arms either short and ornamented with micropapillae and calcium carbonate crystals, or long, erect, curling, and twisted.
Leaves

blade lanceolate to broadly ovate;

abaxial surface often papillate.

Inflorescences

bracts adnate to inflorescence branches, distal portion either minute and caducous or expanding into showy, nonchlorophyllous involucres.

Pedicels

present or absent.

Flowers

hypanthium turbinate or urceolate;

petals spreading or recurved, usually cream, rarely purple;

stamens exserted;

anthers dorsifixed, versatile.

Drupes

globose, subglobose, or ellipsoid, slightly fleshy.

x

= 11.

Cornus

Distribution
from USDA
North America; Mexico; Central America; n South America; w South America; Eurasia; Africa; predominately northern boreal and temperate regions; also high elevations in subtropical and tropical regions
[BONAP county map]
Discussion

Species ca. 60 (20 in the flora).

Cornus as treated here is a monophyletic genus (Z. E. Murrell 1993; Xiang Q. Y. et al. 2006) that has at various times been more narrowly circumscribed by other authors who have chosen to recognize morphological variation in this diverse group as worthy of generic segregation [for example, Arctocrania (Endlicher) Nakai, Benthamia Lindley (not A. Richard), Benthamidia Spach, Chamaepericlymenum Hill, Cynoxylon (Rafinesque) Small, Eukrania Rafinesque, Macrocarpium (Spach) Nakai, Swida Opiz, and Thelycrania (Dumortier) Fourreau]. Cornus is retained here as a coherent group, maintaining subgenera as more appropriate biological units for recognition of this variation.

Some North American members of Cornus are susceptible to fungal pathogens that may cause severe species decline, such as Dogwood Anthracnose (Discula destructiva) in association with C. florida and C. nuttallii, or the less virulent but still destructive Cryptodiaporthe Canker (Cryptodiaporthe corni), which is restricted to C. alternifolia.

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

Key
1. Bracts petaloid, subtending inflorescences.
→ 2
2. Perennial herbs; inflorescences congested cymes; pedicels present.
subg. Arctocrania
2. Trees; inflorescences capitula; pedicels absent.
→ 3
3. Drupes within inflorescence fused into a syncarp.
subg. Syncarpea
3. Drupes distinct.
subg. Cynoxylon
1. Bracts not petaloid, subtending inflorescences or not.
→ 4
4. Inflorescences umbels, bracts well developed, subtending inflorescence and enclosing it over winter.
subg. Cornus
4. Inflorescences cymes, bracts minute, subtending primary and secondary inflorescence branches.
→ 5
5. Branches and leaves alternate; stone apex with cavity.
subg. Mesomora
5. Branches and leaves usually opposite, rarely whorled, subopposite, or alternate at some nodes; stone apex rounded, pointed, or with slight dimple.
subg. Thelycrania
Source FNA vol. 12, p. 443.
Parent taxa Cornaceae
Subordinate taxa
C. subg. Arctocrania, C. subg. Cornus, C. subg. Cynoxylon, C. subg. Mesomora, C. subg. Syncarpea, C. subg. Thelycrania
Name authority Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 1: 117. (1753): Gen. Pl. ed. 5, 54. (1754)
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