3. Croton L. (croton)
Plants annual
(perennial herbs, shrubs, or trees elsewhere), monoecious or dioecious (in C.
texensis), taprooted, with the sap clear (somewhat colored but not milky
elsewhere), pubescent with branched or stellate hairs, these sometimes with
branches more or less fused and then appearing as minute, scurfy, peltate
scales; stinging hairs absent. Stems usually solitary, erect or ascending,
unbranched or more commonly branched, sometimes from near the base. Leaves
alternate but sometimes appearing opposite or whorled because of stem portions
with very short internodes, sessile to long-petiolate, the petiole sometimes
with 1 or 2 large, saucer-shaped glands at the tip, attached at the base of the
nonpeltate blade. Leaf blades linear to nearly circular, tapered, angled, or
rounded at the base, rounded or angled to tapered to a bluntly or sharply
pointed tip, the margins entire or nearly so (regularly toothed in C.
glandulosus), usually pinnately veined (sometimes only the midvein
apparent). Stipules absent (in C. michauxii and C. willdenowii)
or usually not apparent at flowering, then either minute (less than 1 mm long),
lanceolate to ovate, tan scales that are shed early or small glandular dots
that are obscured by the pubescence. Inflorescences terminal, axillary, and/or
from the stem branch points, appearing as short, dense, spikelike racemes or
dense clusters, the staminate and pistillate flowers variously positioned, each
flower usually with an inconspicuous, short, slender bract (often threadlike,
brown, and shed before flowering). Flowers with a nectar disc, this entire or
with lobes equal to the number of calyx lobes. Staminate flowers with the
calyces usually deeply 5-lobed, corollas of 5 petals (except in C. texensis)
about as long as the calyx, the 5–20 small stamens (more elsewhere) with the
filaments free. Pistillate flowers with the calyces usually deeply 5–12-lobed,
corollas highly reduced or absent, the ovary with 1–3 locule(s) and 1 ovule per
locule, the 1–3 style(s) free (or in some 3-styled species fused at the very
base), each deeply 2-lobed, the lobes sometimes lobed again or branched. Fruits
unlobed or slightly 3-lobed (circular in cross-section or nearly so), dehiscent
except in C. michauxii and C. willdenowii. Seeds nearly spherical
to oblong-ovoid or ovoid, the caruncle absent or a small, light-colored knob at
the end adjacent to the attachment point, the surface smooth and often shiny,
yellowish brown or reddish brown to dark brown, sometimes mottled. More than
800 species, nearly worldwide, but most diverse in tropical and subtropical
regions.
The taxonomy and
phylogeny of this large and morphologically variable genus still requires much
further study. As noted by Webster (1967), for its size Croton contains
surprisingly few species of economic importance. The common houseplants with
brightly colored variegated leaves referred to as croton actually are Codiaeum
variegatum (L.) A. Juss., a paleotropical member of the family not
particularly closely related to the true crotons. The seeds of the Asian Croton
tiglium L. are the source of croton oil, which has uses similar to those of
castor oil (see the treatment of Ricinus). The stellate hairs sometimes
are shed easily when plants are handled and can cause eye irritation.