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Cornus florida L.  
Go To Encyclopedia of Life...
Family: Cornaceae
Flowering Dogwood
[Benthamidia florida (L.) Spach, moreCornus florida var. rubra Weston, Cornus florida var. xanthocarpa , Cynoxylon floridum]
Cornus florida image
Paul Rothrock  
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The Morton Arboretum
Tree 5 - 10 m tall, trunk 15 - 30 cm in diameter Leaves: opposite, clustered near end of stem, dark green above, paler beneath, 7 - 12 cm long, 5 - 8 cm wide, elliptic to egg-shaped with arching (arcuate) veins, non-toothed or wavy-toothed, sometimes hairy above, often hairy along veins beneath. Leaves turn red to reddish purple in fall. Flowers: borne at ends of stems in tight clusters, yellowish green. Four showy, white to pinkish, petal-like bracts to 5 cm long surround the flowers. Fruit: fleshy with one or two center seeds (drupe), in clusters of three to six, shiny red, 1 - 1.5 cm long, egg-shaped. Bark: reddish to blackish brown, broken into squared plates. Twigs: changing from yellowish green with white hairs to smooth and light brown or reddish gray, arching upward at the tips. Buds: green to red, tiny, narrow, hairy. Flower buds are stalked, grayish, flattened spherical, and silky. Form: flat-topped, wide-spreading, with a short crooked trunk that divides close to the ground.

Similar species: Cornus florida has the arching leaf venation characteristic of the genus. It is easily distinguished from other dogwoods because it is a small tree that has four large petal-like bracts surrounding the flower clusters and tight clusters of red fruit.

Flowering: late April to early June

Habitat and ecology: An understory tree frequently found in mesic woods of the eastern Chicago Region.

Occurence in the Chicago region: native

Notes: This species is a commonly planted ornamental tree with many cultivars available, including some with pink or red flower bracts. The wood is used for making tool handles, bobbin heads, weaving shuttles, mallet heads, and spools. Extracts made from the bark and flowers were once treatments for fever, jaundice, cholera, and malaria. The leaves decompose quickly, are high in calcium and enrich the soil efficiently.

Etymology: Cornus comes from the Latin word, cornu, meaning horn, referring to its hard wood. Florida comes from the Latin word for flowering, referring to its large flowers.

Author: The Morton Arboretum

From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam
Frequent to common in dry woods throughout the state except in the northwestern part where it is absent from the sandy black oak woods. The largest tree I have seen was in Warrick County, which had a clear bole of 10 feet and measured 40 inches in circumference at four and a half feet above the ground.
Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Widely branched small tree (or large shrub) to 10 m, the bark becoming closely and deeply checked; lvs ovate to elliptic or obovate, mostly 6-10 cm and half as wide, abruptly acuminate, pale beneath, strigillose on both sides; bracts 4, white (pink), obcordate, notched at the tip, 3-6 cm; fls yellowish, 20-30 in the cluster; fr red, ellipsoid, 10-15 mm; 2n=22. Woods; Me. to s. Ont., Mich., Ill., Mo., and Okla., s. to Fla. and ne. Mex. May, June, before the lvs are fully grown. (Cynoxylon f.)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
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Cornus florida
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Paul Rothrock  
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Paul Rothrock  
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Steven J. Baskauf  
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Zoya Akulova  
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The National Science Foundation
Developments of SEINet, Symbiota, and associated specimen databases have been supported by National Science Foundation Grants (DBI 9983132, BRC 0237418, DBI 0743827, DBI 0847966)