5. Cornus foemina Mill. (gray dogwood, stiff dogwood)
Map 1610, Pl. j
Plants shrubs or
small trees 2–5 m tall, often colonial. Twigs reddish brown to tan or brown
when young, becoming olive green, grayish brown, or gray with age, glabrous or
sparsely appressed-hairy, the pith white or tan. Bark smooth or with shallow
fissures, the ridges becoming divided into thin, irregular plates, gray to
grayish brown, sometimes with small, slightly raised, lighter dots. Leaves
opposite, usually relatively evenly dispersed along the branches, the petiole
0.5–1.0 cm long. Leaf blades (3–)5–12 cm long, 2–7 cm wide, broadly lanceolate
to elliptic or ovate, rounded, angled, or short-tapered at the base, tapered to
a sharply pointed tip, the surfaces glabrous or sparsely to moderately
pubescent with mostly appressed, straight, T-shaped hairs, the undersurface
sometimes with microscopic white papillae and slightly roughened to the touch,
the lateral veins 3 or 4(5) pairs, these relatively evenly spaced. Inflorescences
either hemispherical to pyramidal panicles or appearing more or less umbellate
and flat-topped to shallowly convex, the bracts absent, the flower stalks 2–5
mm long, glabrous or sparsely hairy, becoming reddish brown to purplish brown
as the fruits mature. Sepals 0.4–1.0 mm long. Petals 2–4 mm long, narrowly
oblong-lanceolate, white to cream-colored, rarely greenish-tinged. Style 2–3 mm
long, relatively slender, not broadened toward the tip. Fruits 4–7 mm in
diameter, spherical, white or light blue, rarely white-and-blue mottled. Stone
strongly longitudinally veined but smooth or shallowly and inconspicuously
grooved. 2n=22. May–July.
Scattered nearly
throughout the state but absent from most of the Unglaciated Plains Division
(eastern U.S. west to North Dakota and Texas; Canada). Swamps, bottomland
forests, mesic upland forests in ravines, banks of streams and rivers, margins
of ponds, lakes, and sinkhole ponds, bases of bluffs, fens, acid seeps, and
edges of bottomland and upland prairies; also fencerows, old fields, ditches,
railroads, and roadsides.
Wilson (1965)
treated the C. foemina complex as comprising three subspecies that some
other botanists have considered separate species. The two Missouri taxa, ssp. foemina
and ssp. racemosa, are southern and northern analogs whose ranges
overlap in southern Missouri, where Wilson recorded apparently fertile putative
hybrids. The third subspecies, ssp. microcarpa (Nash) J.S. Wilson (C.
asperifolia Michx.), inhabits portions of the Coastal Plain from Florida
north to North Carolina and west to Alabama and differs in its relatively
strongly roughened twigs and leaves and often slightly smaller fruits. Wilson
also reported apparently sterile hybrids between C. foemina and both C.
amomum and C. drummondii, which are discussed briefly in the
treatments of those species. Steyermark (1963), who also noted possible
hybridization between C. foemina ssp. racemosa (as C. racemosa)
and C. amomum ssp. obliqua (as C. obliqua), referred to
such plants under the name C. arnoldiana Rehder.
Some botanists
(Gleason and Cronquist, 1991; Murrell, 1992) have used the name C. stricta
in place of C. foemina because the original description of C. foemina
was ambiguous, possibly referring to ssp. foemina or to ssp. racemosa.
However, Wilson (1965) argued that the original materials from which the name
was described were cultivated from plants growing in a region and habitat where
only ssp. foemina grows today, and he accepted the name C. foemina
for the species.