fbpx
Wikipedia

Cornus

Cornus is a genus of about 30–60 species[Note 1] of woody plants in the family Cornaceae, commonly known as dogwoods, which can generally be distinguished by their blossoms, berries, and distinctive bark.[3] Most are deciduous trees or shrubs, but a few species are nearly herbaceous perennial subshrubs, and some species are evergreen. Several species have small heads of inconspicuous flowers surrounded by an involucre of large, typically white petal-like bracts, while others have more open clusters of petal-bearing flowers. The various species of dogwood are native throughout much of temperate and boreal Eurasia and North America, with China, Japan, and the southeastern United States being particularly rich in native species.

Cornus
Temporal range: Late CampanianHolocene, 73–0 Ma[1]
Cornus kousa var. chinensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Cornales
Family: Cornaceae
Genus: Cornus
L.
Type species
Cornus mas
Subgenera
  • Afrocrania
  • Arctocrania
  • Cornus
  • Cynoxylon
  • Discocrania
  • Kraniopsis
  • Mesomora
  • Sinocornus
  • Syncarpea
  • Yinquania
Synonyms

Chamaepericlimenum Hill

In species such as this Cornus × unalaschkensis, the tiny four-petaled flowers are clustered in a tightly packed, flattened cyme at the center of four showy white petal-like bracts.
Cornus mas
Cornus florida in spring
Cornus drummondii in flower
Mature and immature flowers of Cornus canadensis, Bonnechere Provincial Park, Ontario
Cornus canadensis fruit
Spring budding

Species include the common dogwood Cornus sanguinea of Eurasia, the widely cultivated flowering dogwood (Cornus florida) of eastern North America, the Pacific dogwood Cornus nuttallii of western North America, the Kousa dogwood Cornus kousa of eastern Asia, and two low-growing boreal species, the Canadian and Eurasian dwarf cornels (or bunchberries), Cornus canadensis and Cornus suecica respectively.

Depending on botanical interpretation, the dogwoods are variously divided into one to nine genera or subgenera; a broadly inclusive genus Cornus is accepted here.

Terminology edit

Cornus is the Latin word for the cornel tree, Cornus mas. The name cornel dates to the 1550s, via German from Middle Latin cornolium, ultimately from the diminutive cornuculum, of cornum, the Latin word for the cornel cherry. Cornus means "horn",[4] presumably applied to the cherry after the example of κερασός, the Greek word for "cherry", which itself is of pre-Greek origin but reminiscent of κέρας, the Greek word for "horn".

The name "dog-tree" entered the English vocabulary before 1548, becoming "dogwood" by 1614. Once the name dogwood was affixed to this kind of tree, it soon acquired a secondary name as the hound's tree, while the fruits came to be known as "dogberries" or "houndberries" (the latter a name also for the berries of black nightshade, alluding to Hecate's hounds).[citation needed]

The name was explained, from as early as the 16th century itself, as derived from dag "skewer",[5][6] as the wood of the tree was said to have been used to make butcher's skewers. This is uncertain, as the form *dagwood was never attested. It is also possible that the tree was named for its berry, called dogberry from at least the 1550s, where the implication could be that the quality of the berry is inferior, as it were "fit for a dog".[7]

 
Cherokee princess dogwood

An older name of the dogwood in English is whipple-tree, occurring in a list of trees (as whipultre) in Geoffrey Chaucer Canterbury Tales.[8] This name is cognate with the Middle Low German wipel-bom "cornel", Dutch wepe, weype "cornel" (the wh- in Chaucer is unetymological, the word would have been Middle English wipel). The tree was so named for waving its branches, c.f. Middle Dutch wepelen "totter, waver", Frisian wepeln, German wippen.[9]

The name whippletree, also whiffle-tree, now refers to an element of the traction of a horse-drawn cart linking the draw pole of the cart to the harnesses of the horses in file. In this sense it is first recorded in 1733. This mechanism was usually made from oak or ash (and not from dogwood), and it is unlikely that there is a connection to the name for whipple-tree for Cornus.[10]

Description edit

Dogwoods have simple, untoothed leaves with the veins curving distinctively as they approach the leaf margins. Most dogwood species have opposite leaves, while a few, such as Cornus alternifolia and C. controversa, have their leaves alternate. Dogwood flowers have four parts. In many species, the flowers are borne separately in open (but often dense) clusters, while in various other species (such as the flowering dogwood), the flowers themselves are tightly clustered, lacking showy petals, but surrounded by four to six large, typically white petal-like bracts.[citation needed]

The fruits of all dogwood species are drupes with one or two seeds, often brightly colorful. The drupes of species in the subgenus Cornus are edible. Many are without much flavor. Cornus kousa and Cornus mas are sold commercially as edible fruit trees. The fruits of Cornus kousa have a sweet, tropical pudding like flavor in addition to hard pits. The fruits of Cornus mas are both tart and sweet when completely ripe. They have been eaten in Eastern Europe for centuries, both as food and medicine to fight colds and flus. They are very high in vitamin C. By contrast, the fruits of species in subgenus Swida are mildly toxic to people, though readily eaten by birds.[citation needed]

Dogwoods are used as food plants by the larvae of some species of butterflies and moths, including the emperor moth, the engrailed, the small angle shades, and the following case-bearers of the genus Coleophora: C. ahenella, C. salicivorella (recorded on Cornus canadensis), C. albiantennaella, C. cornella and C. cornivorella, with the latter three all feeding exclusively on Cornus.[citation needed]

Uses edit

Dogwoods are widely planted horticulturally, and the dense wood of the larger-stemmed species is valued for certain specialized purposes. Cutting boards and fine turnings can be made from this fine grained and beautiful wood. Over 32 different varieties of game birds, including quail, feed on the red seeds.[11]

Horticulture edit

Various species of Cornus, particularly the flowering dogwood (Cornus florida), are ubiquitous in American gardens and landscaping; horticulturist Donald Wyman stated, "There is a dogwood for almost every part of the U.S. except the hottest and driest areas".[12] In contrast, in Northwest Europe the lack of sharp winters and hot summers makes Cornus florida very shy of flowering.[13]

Other Cornus species are stoloniferous shrubs that grow naturally in wet habitats and along waterways. Several of these are used along highways and in naturalizing landscape plantings, especially those species with bright red or bright yellow stems, particularly conspicuous in winter, such as Cornus stolonifera.

The following cultivars, of mixed or uncertain origin, have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit (confirmed 2017):[14]

Fruits edit

The species Cornus mas is commonly cultivated in southeastern Europe for its showy, edible berries, that have the color of the carnelian gemstone. Cornelian-cherries have one seed each and are used in syrups and preserves.[19]

Wood edit

Dense and fine-grained, dogwood timber has a density of 0.79 and is highly prized for making loom shuttles, tool handles, roller skates and other small items that require a very hard and strong wood.[20] Though it is tough for woodworking, some artisans favor dogwood for small projects such as walking canes, arrow making, mountain dulcimers and fine inlays. Dogwood wood is an excellent substitute for persimmon wood in the heads of certain golf clubs ("woods"). Dogwood lumber is rare in that it is not readily available with any manufacturer and must be cut down by the person(s) wanting to use it.[citation needed]

Larger items have also been occasionally made of dogwood, such as the screw-in basket-style wine or fruit presses. The first kinds of laminated tennis rackets were also made from this wood, cut into thin strips.[citation needed]

Dogwood twigs were used by U.S. pioneers to brush their teeth. They would peel off the bark, bite the twig and then scrub their teeth.[21]

Traditional medicine edit

The bark of Cornus species is rich in tannins and has been used in traditional medicine as a substitute for quinine.[clarification needed][22] During the American Civil War, confederate soldiers made a tea from the bark to treat pain and fevers, and used dogwood leaves in a poultice to cover wounds.[23][unreliable source?]

The Japanese cornel, C. officinalis, is used in traditional Chinese medicine as shān zhū yú for several minor ailments.[24]

Classification edit

The following classification recognizes a single, inclusive genus Cornus,[25][26] with four subgroups and ten subgenera supported by molecular phylogeny.[27][28][29] Geographical ranges as native plants are given below. In addition, cultivated species occasionally persist or spread from plantings beyond their native ranges, but are rarely if ever locally invasive.[citation needed]

Blue- or white-fruited dogwoods edit

Paniculate or corymbose cymes; bracts minute, nonmodified; fruits globose or subglobose, white, blue, or black:

Cornelian cherries edit

Umbellate cymes; bracts modified, non-petaloid; fruits oblong, red; stone walls filled with cavities:

Big-bracted dogwoods edit

Capitular cymes:

  • Subgenus Discocrania. Bracts 4, modified, non-petaloid; fruits oblong, red.
  • Subgenus Cynoxylon. Bracts 4 or 6, large and petaloid, fruits oblong, red.
  • Subgenus Syncarpea. Bracts 4, large and petaloid, fruits red, fused into a compound multi-stoned berry.

Dwarf dogwoods edit

Minute corymbose cymes; bracts 4, petaloid; fruit globose, red; rhizomatous herb:

Incertae sedis (unplaced) edit

Horticultural hybrids edit

Cornus × rutgersensis (Hybrid: C. florida × C. kousa). Horticulturally developed.[35]

Cultural references edit

The inflorescence of the Pacific dogwood (Cornus nuttallii) is the official flower of the province of British Columbia. The flowering dogwood (Cornus florida) and its inflorescence are the state tree and the state flower respectively for the U.S. Commonwealth of Virginia. It is also the state tree of Missouri and the state flower of North Carolina,[36] and the state memorial tree of New Jersey.[37] The term "dogwood winter", in colloquial use in the American Southeast, especially Appalachia,[38] is sometimes used to describe a cold snap in spring, presumably because farmers believed it was not safe to plant their crops until after the dogwoods blossomed.[39]

Anne Morrow Lindbergh gives a vivid description of the dogwood tree in her poem "Dogwood".[40]

Notes edit

  1. ^ 58 species according to Xiang et al. (2006)[2]
  2. ^ Cornus sericea, treated separately here, is sometimes included in a more broadly taken concept of Cornus alba, which in that sense is also native in North America.
  3. ^ Cornus obliqua, here recognized separately, has been included in a broader concept of C. amomum by some botanists. Canadian reports for C. amomum are apparently all based on plants here classified as C. obliqua.
  4. ^ Cornus obliqua is sometimes included in a more broadly taken concept of C. amomum, also in the eastern U.S.
  5. ^ Cornus sericea (including C. stolonifera) is sometimes itself included in a more broadly taken concept of the otherwise Eurasian Cornus alba.

References edit

  1. ^ Atkinson, Brian A.; Stockey, Ruth A.; Rothwell, Gar W. (2016). "Cretaceous origin of dogwoods: an anatomically preserved Cornus (Cornaceae) fruit from the Campanian of Vancouver Island". PeerJ. 4: e2808. doi:10.7717/peerj.2808. PMC 5180587. PMID 28028474.
  2. ^ Qiu-Yun (Jenny) Xiang; David T. Thomas; Wenheng Zhang; Steven R. Manchester & Zack Murrell (2006). "Species level phylogeny of the genus Cornus (Cornaceae) based on molecular and morphological evidence – implications for taxonomy and Tertiary intercontinental migration". Taxon. 55 (1): 9–30. doi:10.2307/25065525. JSTOR 25065525.
  3. ^ . answers.com. Archived from the original on August 26, 2014. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  4. ^ Gledhill, David (2008). "The Names of Plants". Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521866453 (hardback), ISBN 9780521685535 (paperback). pp 121
  5. ^ Vedel, H., & Lange, J. (1960). Trees and Bushes in Wood and Hedgerow. Metheun & Co. Ltd., London.
  6. ^ Fernald, Merritt Lyndon (1950). Gray's Manual of Botany (8th ed.). New York: American Book Company.
  7. ^ "the first element sometimes said to have been perhaps dag — compare dagger and dag (v.) "to pierce or stab" (1630s, perhaps 15c.). The trees have hard, white wood that was said to have been used in making butchers' skewers; another name for it was skewer-wood. This explanation is as old as the word itself in English, but the form *dagwood is not attested. Another guess is that the tree was given the name in reference to its fruit, which was called dogberry from 1550s, and dog (n.) had implications of "cheap, inferior" (i.e. "fit for a dog")." "dogwood". Online Etymology Dictionary. Douglas Harper.
  8. ^ ook, firre, birch, asp, alder, holm, popler / wilow, elm, plane, ash, box, chasteyn, lind, laurer / mapul, thorn, beech, hasel, ew, whipultre "The Knight's Tale", verse 2065
  9. ^ Walter William Skeat, A Student's Pastime: Being a Select Series of Articles Reprinted from "Notes and Queries", Clarendon Press, 1896, p. 252.
  10. ^ William Shepard Walsh et al. (eds.), American Notes and Queries vol. 5 (1890) p. 118
  11. ^ . Prepper Gardens. Archived from the original on 2013-11-16. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
  12. ^ Wyman's Garden Encyclopedia, s.v. "Cornus"
  13. ^ Alice M. Coats, Garden Shrubs and their Histories (1964) 1992, s.v. "Cornus".
  14. ^ "AGM Plants - Ornamental" (PDF). Royal Horticultural Society. July 2017. p. 16. Retrieved 24 January 2018.
  15. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Cornus 'Eddie's White Wonder'". Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  16. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Cornus 'Norman Hadden'". Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  17. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Cornus 'Ormonde'". Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  18. ^ "RHS Plantfinder - Cornus 'Porlock'". Retrieved 2 February 2018.
  19. ^ "Cornus mas - Plant Finder". www.missouribotanicalgarden.org.
  20. ^ "Dogwood." McGraw-Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006. Credo Reference. Web. 17 September 2012.
  21. ^ Gunn, John C. (1835). Gunn's Domestic Medicine (4th ed.). John M. Gallagher, printer. p. 523.
  22. ^ "Dogwood or cornel." The Columbia Encyclopedia. New York: Columbia University Press, 2008. Credo Reference. Web. 17 September 2012.
  23. ^ . Prepper Gardens. Archived from the original on 2013-11-16. Retrieved January 8, 2013.
  24. ^ Schafer, Peg (2011). The Chinese Medicinal Herb Farm: A Cultivator's Guide to Small-scale Organic Herb Production. Chelsea Green Publishing. pp. 312 (page 150). ISBN 9781603583305.
  25. ^ Richard H. Eyde (1987). "The case for keeping Cornus in the broad Linnaean sense". Systematic Botany. 12 (4): 505–518. doi:10.2307/2418886. JSTOR 2418886.
  26. ^ Richard H. Eyde (1988). "Comprehending Cornus: puzzles and progress in the systematics of the dogwoods". Botanical Review. 54 (3): 233–351. doi:10.1007/bf02868985. JSTOR 4354115. S2CID 12507834.
  27. ^ Fan, Chuanzhu; Xiang, Qiu-Yun (2001). "Phylogenetic relationships within Cornus (Cornaceae) based on 26S rDNA sequences". American Journal of Botany. 88 (6): 1131–1138. doi:10.2307/2657096. JSTOR 2657096. PMID 11410478.
  28. ^ Zhiang, Qiu-Yun; Thomas, David T.; Zhang, Wenheng; Manchester, Steven R.; Murrell, Zack (2006). "Species level phylogeny of the genus Cornus (Cornaceae) based on molecular and morphological evidence—implications for taxonomy and Tertiary intercontinental migration". Taxon. 55 (1). Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  29. ^ Nowicki, Marcin; Boggess, Sarah L.; Saxton, Arnold M.; Hadziabdic, Denita; Xiang, Qiu-Yun Jenny; Molnar, Thomas; Huff, Matthew L.; Staton, Margaret E.; Zhao, Yichen (2018-10-23). Heinze, Berthold (ed.). "Haplotyping of Cornus florida and C. kousa chloroplasts: Insights into species-level differences and patterns of plastic DNA variation in cultivars". PLOS ONE. 13 (10): e0205407. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1305407N. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0205407. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 6198962. PMID 30352068.
  30. ^ "Cornus oblonga - Wall". Plants For A Future. Retrieved February 9, 2022.
  31. ^ "Tropicos | Name - Cornus peruviana J.F. Macbr". www.tropicos.org. Retrieved 2016-01-29.
  32. ^ Macbride, J.F. (1959). "Cornaceae". Flora of Peru. Vol. 13 pt.5 no.1. Field Museum. pp. 44–45.
  33. ^ Manchester, S.R.; Xiang, X-P.; Xiang, Q-Y (2010). "Fruits of Cornelian Cherries (Cornaceae: Cornus Subg. Cornus) in the Paleocene and Eocene of the Northern Hemisphere" (PDF). International Journal of Plant Sciences. 171 (8): 882–891. doi:10.1086/655771. S2CID 83524109.[permanent dead link]
  34. ^ Manchester, S.R. (1994). "Fruits and Seeds of the Middle Eocene Nut Beds Flora, Clarno Formation, Oregon". Palaeontographica Americana. 58: 30–31.
  35. ^ "Cornus florida × Cornus kousa". Landscape Plants: Images, identification, and information. Oregon State University. Retrieved 20 May 2011.
  36. ^ "Find Official State Flower for USA | Teleflora". www.teleflora.com.
  37. ^ "List of State Trees | State Symbols USA". statesymbolsusa.org.
  38. ^ Jenkins, Mary Tom (2021-03-31). "The Six Little Winters of Tennessee". Visit Cleveland TN. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
  39. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-05-03. Retrieved 2011-05-20.
  40. ^ Morrow, Anne (1956). Dogwood. New York: Pantheon Books. pp. 38–39.

External links edit

  • Dogwood history and uses
  • Cornus in Flora of China

cornus, other, uses, disambiguation, dogwood, redirects, here, other, uses, dogwood, disambiguation, northern, mountain, known, dogberry, sorbus, decora, genus, about, species, note, woody, plants, family, cornaceae, commonly, known, dogwoods, which, generally. For other uses see Cornus disambiguation Dogwood redirects here For other uses see Dogwood disambiguation For the northern mountain ash known as Dogberry see Sorbus decora Cornus is a genus of about 30 60 species Note 1 of woody plants in the family Cornaceae commonly known as dogwoods which can generally be distinguished by their blossoms berries and distinctive bark 3 Most are deciduous trees or shrubs but a few species are nearly herbaceous perennial subshrubs and some species are evergreen Several species have small heads of inconspicuous flowers surrounded by an involucre of large typically white petal like bracts while others have more open clusters of petal bearing flowers The various species of dogwood are native throughout much of temperate and boreal Eurasia and North America with China Japan and the southeastern United States being particularly rich in native species CornusTemporal range Late Campanian Holocene 73 0 Ma 1 PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NCornus kousa var chinensisScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder CornalesFamily CornaceaeGenus CornusL Type speciesCornus masL SubgeneraAfrocrania Arctocrania Cornus Cynoxylon Discocrania Kraniopsis Mesomora Sinocornus Syncarpea YinquaniaSynonymsChamaepericlimenum HillIn species such as this Cornus unalaschkensis the tiny four petaled flowers are clustered in a tightly packed flattened cyme at the center of four showy white petal like bracts Cornus masCornus florida in springCornus drummondii in flowerMature and immature flowers of Cornus canadensis Bonnechere Provincial Park OntarioCornus canadensis fruitSpring buddingSpecies include the common dogwood Cornus sanguinea of Eurasia the widely cultivated flowering dogwood Cornus florida of eastern North America the Pacific dogwood Cornus nuttallii of western North America the Kousa dogwood Cornus kousa of eastern Asia and two low growing boreal species the Canadian and Eurasian dwarf cornels or bunchberries Cornus canadensis and Cornus suecica respectively Depending on botanical interpretation the dogwoods are variously divided into one to nine genera or subgenera a broadly inclusive genus Cornus is accepted here Contents 1 Terminology 2 Description 3 Uses 3 1 Horticulture 3 2 Fruits 3 3 Wood 3 4 Traditional medicine 4 Classification 4 1 Blue or white fruited dogwoods 4 2 Cornelian cherries 4 3 Big bracted dogwoods 4 4 Dwarf dogwoods 4 5 Incertae sedis unplaced 4 6 Horticultural hybrids 5 Cultural references 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksTerminology editCornus is the Latin word for the cornel tree Cornus mas The name cornel dates to the 1550s via German from Middle Latin cornolium ultimately from the diminutive cornuculum of cornum the Latin word for the cornel cherry Cornus means horn 4 presumably applied to the cherry after the example of kerasos the Greek word for cherry which itself is of pre Greek origin but reminiscent of keras the Greek word for horn The name dog tree entered the English vocabulary before 1548 becoming dogwood by 1614 Once the name dogwood was affixed to this kind of tree it soon acquired a secondary name as the hound s tree while the fruits came to be known as dogberries or houndberries the latter a name also for the berries of black nightshade alluding to Hecate s hounds citation needed The name was explained from as early as the 16th century itself as derived from dag skewer 5 6 as the wood of the tree was said to have been used to make butcher s skewers This is uncertain as the form dagwood was never attested It is also possible that the tree was named for its berry called dogberry from at least the 1550s where the implication could be that the quality of the berry is inferior as it were fit for a dog 7 nbsp Cherokee princess dogwoodAn older name of the dogwood in English is whipple tree occurring in a list of trees as whipultre in Geoffrey Chaucer Canterbury Tales 8 This name is cognate with the Middle Low German wipel bom cornel Dutch wepe weype cornel the wh in Chaucer is unetymological the word would have been Middle English wipel The tree was so named for waving its branches c f Middle Dutch wepelen totter waver Frisian wepeln German wippen 9 The name whippletree also whiffle tree now refers to an element of the traction of a horse drawn cart linking the draw pole of the cart to the harnesses of the horses in file In this sense it is first recorded in 1733 This mechanism was usually made from oak or ash and not from dogwood and it is unlikely that there is a connection to the name for whipple tree for Cornus 10 Description editDogwoods have simple untoothed leaves with the veins curving distinctively as they approach the leaf margins Most dogwood species have opposite leaves while a few such as Cornus alternifolia and C controversa have their leaves alternate Dogwood flowers have four parts In many species the flowers are borne separately in open but often dense clusters while in various other species such as the flowering dogwood the flowers themselves are tightly clustered lacking showy petals but surrounded by four to six large typically white petal like bracts citation needed The fruits of all dogwood species are drupes with one or two seeds often brightly colorful The drupes of species in the subgenus Cornus are edible Many are without much flavor Cornus kousa and Cornus mas are sold commercially as edible fruit trees The fruits of Cornus kousa have a sweet tropical pudding like flavor in addition to hard pits The fruits of Cornus mas are both tart and sweet when completely ripe They have been eaten in Eastern Europe for centuries both as food and medicine to fight colds and flus They are very high in vitamin C By contrast the fruits of species in subgenus Swida are mildly toxic to people though readily eaten by birds citation needed Dogwoods are used as food plants by the larvae of some species of butterflies and moths including the emperor moth the engrailed the small angle shades and the following case bearers of the genus Coleophora C ahenella C salicivorella recorded on Cornus canadensis C albiantennaella C cornella and C cornivorella with the latter three all feeding exclusively on Cornus citation needed Uses editDogwoods are widely planted horticulturally and the dense wood of the larger stemmed species is valued for certain specialized purposes Cutting boards and fine turnings can be made from this fine grained and beautiful wood Over 32 different varieties of game birds including quail feed on the red seeds 11 Horticulture edit Various species of Cornus particularly the flowering dogwood Cornus florida are ubiquitous in American gardens and landscaping horticulturist Donald Wyman stated There is a dogwood for almost every part of the U S except the hottest and driest areas 12 In contrast in Northwest Europe the lack of sharp winters and hot summers makes Cornus florida very shy of flowering 13 Other Cornus species are stoloniferous shrubs that grow naturally in wet habitats and along waterways Several of these are used along highways and in naturalizing landscape plantings especially those species with bright red or bright yellow stems particularly conspicuous in winter such as Cornus stolonifera The following cultivars of mixed or uncertain origin have gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit confirmed 2017 14 Eddie s White Wonder 15 Norman Hadden 16 Ormonde 17 Porlock 18 Fruits edit The species Cornus mas is commonly cultivated in southeastern Europe for its showy edible berries that have the color of the carnelian gemstone Cornelian cherries have one seed each and are used in syrups and preserves 19 Wood edit Dense and fine grained dogwood timber has a density of 0 79 and is highly prized for making loom shuttles tool handles roller skates and other small items that require a very hard and strong wood 20 Though it is tough for woodworking some artisans favor dogwood for small projects such as walking canes arrow making mountain dulcimers and fine inlays Dogwood wood is an excellent substitute for persimmon wood in the heads of certain golf clubs woods Dogwood lumber is rare in that it is not readily available with any manufacturer and must be cut down by the person s wanting to use it citation needed Larger items have also been occasionally made of dogwood such as the screw in basket style wine or fruit presses The first kinds of laminated tennis rackets were also made from this wood cut into thin strips citation needed Dogwood twigs were used by U S pioneers to brush their teeth They would peel off the bark bite the twig and then scrub their teeth 21 Traditional medicine edit The bark of Cornus species is rich in tannins and has been used in traditional medicine as a substitute for quinine clarification needed 22 During the American Civil War confederate soldiers made a tea from the bark to treat pain and fevers and used dogwood leaves in a poultice to cover wounds 23 unreliable source The Japanese cornel C officinalis is used in traditional Chinese medicine as shan zhu yu for several minor ailments 24 Classification editThe following classification recognizes a single inclusive genus Cornus 25 26 with four subgroups and ten subgenera supported by molecular phylogeny 27 28 29 Geographical ranges as native plants are given below In addition cultivated species occasionally persist or spread from plantings beyond their native ranges but are rarely if ever locally invasive citation needed Blue or white fruited dogwoods edit Paniculate or corymbose cymes bracts minute nonmodified fruits globose or subglobose white blue or black Subgenus Yinquania Leaves opposite to subopposite fall blooming Cornus oblonga East Asia from Pakistan through the Himalayas and China 30 Cornus peruviana Costa Rica and Venezuela to Bolivia 31 32 Subgenus Kraniopsis Leaves opposite summer blooming Cornus alba Note 2 Siberian dogwood Siberia and northern China Cornus amomum Note 3 silky dogwood Eastern U S east of the Great Plains except for the Deep South Cornus asperifolia toughleaf dogwood Southeastern U S Cornus austrosinensis South China dogwood East Asia Cornus bretschneideri Bretschneider s dogwood Northern China Cornus coreana Korean dogwood Northeast Asia Cornus drummondii roughleaf dogwood U S between the Appalachia and the Great Plains and southern Ontario Canada Cornus excelsa Mexico to Honduras Cornus foemina stiff dogwood Southeastern and southern United States Cornus glabrata brown dogwood or smooth dogwood Western North America Cornus hemsleyi Hemsley s dogwood Southwest China Cornus koehneana Koehne s dogwood Southwest China Cornus macrophylla large leafed dogwood Chinese 棶木 pinyin laimu East Asia Cornus obliqua Note 4 pale dogwood Northeastern and central U S and southeastern Canada Cornus paucinervis China Cornus racemosa northern swamp dogwood or gray dogwood Northeastern and central U S and extreme southeastern Canada Cornus rugosa round leaf dogwood Northeastern and north central U S and southeastern Canada Cornus sanguinea common dogwood Europe Cornus sericea Note 5 red osier dogwood Northern and western North America except Arctic regions Cornus walteri Walter s dogwood Central China Cornus wilsoniana ghost dogwood China Cornus arnoldiana Hybrid C obliqua C racemosa Eastern North America Subgenus Mesomora Leaves alternate summer blooming Cornus alternifolia pagoda dogwood or alternate leaf dogwood Eastern U S and southeastern Canada Cornus controversa table dogwood East Asia Cornelian cherries edit Umbellate cymes bracts modified non petaloid fruits oblong red stone walls filled with cavities Subgenus Afrocrania Dioecious bracts 4 Cornus volkensii Afromontane eastern Africa Subgenus Cornus Plants hermaphroditic bracts 4 or 6 Cornus eydeana Yunnan in China Cornus mas European cornel or Cornelian cherry Mediterranean Cornus officinalis Japanese cornel China Japan Korea Cornus piggae Late Paleocene North Dakota 33 Cornus sessilis blackfruit cornel California Subgenus Sinocornus Plants hermaphroditic bracts 4 or 6 Cornus chinensis Chinese cornel China Big bracted dogwoods edit Capitular cymes Subgenus Discocrania Bracts 4 modified non petaloid fruits oblong red Cornus disciflora Mexico and Central America Subgenus Cynoxylon Bracts 4 or 6 large and petaloid fruits oblong red Cornus florida flowering dogwood U S east of the Great Plains north to southern Ontario Cornus nuttallii Pacific dogwood Western North America from British Columbia to California Subgenus Syncarpea Bracts 4 large and petaloid fruits red fused into a compound multi stoned berry Cornus capitata Himalayan flowering dogwood Himalaya Cornus hongkongensis Hong Kong dogwood Southern China Laos Vietnam Cornus kousa Kousa dogwood Japan and as subsp chinensis central and northern China Cornus multinervosa Yunnan and Sichuan provinces of ChinaDwarf dogwoods edit Minute corymbose cymes bracts 4 petaloid fruit globose red rhizomatous herb Subgenus Arctocrania Cornus canadensis Canadian dwarf cornel or bunchberry Northern North America southward in the Appalachian and Rocky Mountains Cornus suecica Eurasian dwarf cornel or bunchberry Northern Eurasia locally in extreme northeast and northwest North America Cornus unalaschkensis Hybrid C canadensis C suecica Aleutian Islands Alaska Greenland and Labrador and Newfoundland in Canada Incertae sedis unplaced edit Cornus clarnensis Middle Eocene Central Oregon 34 Horticultural hybrids edit Cornus rutgersensis Hybrid C florida C kousa Horticulturally developed 35 Cultural references editThe inflorescence of the Pacific dogwood Cornus nuttallii is the official flower of the province of British Columbia The flowering dogwood Cornus florida and its inflorescence are the state tree and the state flower respectively for the U S Commonwealth of Virginia It is also the state tree of Missouri and the state flower of North Carolina 36 and the state memorial tree of New Jersey 37 The term dogwood winter in colloquial use in the American Southeast especially Appalachia 38 is sometimes used to describe a cold snap in spring presumably because farmers believed it was not safe to plant their crops until after the dogwoods blossomed 39 Anne Morrow Lindbergh gives a vivid description of the dogwood tree in her poem Dogwood 40 Notes edit 58 species according to Xiang et al 2006 2 Cornus sericea treated separately here is sometimes included in a more broadly taken concept of Cornus alba which in that sense is also native in North America Cornus obliqua here recognized separately has been included in a broader concept of C amomum by some botanists Canadian reports for C amomum are apparently all based on plants here classified as C obliqua Cornus obliqua is sometimes included in a more broadly taken concept of C amomum also in the eastern U S Cornus sericea including C stolonifera is sometimes itself included in a more broadly taken concept of the otherwise Eurasian Cornus alba References edit Atkinson Brian A Stockey Ruth A Rothwell Gar W 2016 Cretaceous origin of dogwoods an anatomically preserved Cornus Cornaceae fruit from the Campanian of Vancouver Island PeerJ 4 e2808 doi 10 7717 peerj 2808 PMC 5180587 PMID 28028474 Qiu Yun Jenny Xiang David T Thomas Wenheng Zhang Steven R Manchester amp Zack Murrell 2006 Species level phylogeny of the genus Cornus Cornaceae based on molecular and morphological evidence implications for taxonomy and Tertiary intercontinental migration Taxon 55 1 9 30 doi 10 2307 25065525 JSTOR 25065525 Notable Characteristics of Dogwood Trees answers com Archived from the original on August 26 2014 Retrieved August 24 2014 Gledhill David 2008 The Names of Plants Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521866453 hardback ISBN 9780521685535 paperback pp 121 Vedel H amp Lange J 1960 Trees and Bushes in Wood and Hedgerow Metheun amp Co Ltd London Fernald Merritt Lyndon 1950 Gray s Manual of Botany 8th ed New York American Book Company the first element sometimes said to have been perhaps dag compare dagger and dag v to pierce or stab 1630s perhaps 15c The trees have hard white wood that was said to have been used in making butchers skewers another name for it was skewer wood This explanation is as old as the word itself in English but the form dagwood is not attested Another guess is that the tree was given the name in reference to its fruit which was called dogberry from 1550s and dog n had implications of cheap inferior i e fit for a dog dogwood Online Etymology Dictionary Douglas Harper ook firre birch asp alder holm popler wilow elm plane ash box chasteyn lind laurer mapul thorn beech hasel ew whipultre The Knight s Tale verse 2065 Walter William Skeat A Student s Pastime Being a Select Series of Articles Reprinted from Notes and Queries Clarendon Press 1896 p 252 William Shepard Walsh et al eds American Notes and Queries vol 5 1890 p 118 Wildlife Dogwood Trees Prepper Gardens Archived from the original on 2013 11 16 Retrieved January 8 2013 Wyman s Garden Encyclopedia s v Cornus Alice M Coats Garden Shrubs and their Histories 1964 1992 s v Cornus AGM Plants Ornamental PDF Royal Horticultural Society July 2017 p 16 Retrieved 24 January 2018 RHS Plantfinder Cornus Eddie s White Wonder Retrieved 2 February 2018 RHS Plantfinder Cornus Norman Hadden Retrieved 2 February 2018 RHS Plantfinder Cornus Ormonde Retrieved 2 February 2018 RHS Plantfinder Cornus Porlock Retrieved 2 February 2018 Cornus mas Plant Finder www missouribotanicalgarden org Dogwood McGraw Hill Concise Encyclopedia of Science and Technology New York McGraw Hill 2006 Credo Reference Web 17 September 2012 Gunn John C 1835 Gunn s Domestic Medicine 4th ed John M Gallagher printer p 523 Dogwood or cornel The Columbia Encyclopedia New York Columbia University Press 2008 Credo Reference Web 17 September 2012 Medicinal Dogwood Trees Prepper Gardens Archived from the original on 2013 11 16 Retrieved January 8 2013 Schafer Peg 2011 The Chinese Medicinal Herb Farm A Cultivator s Guide to Small scale Organic Herb Production Chelsea Green Publishing pp 312 page 150 ISBN 9781603583305 Richard H Eyde 1987 The case for keeping Cornus in the broad Linnaean sense Systematic Botany 12 4 505 518 doi 10 2307 2418886 JSTOR 2418886 Richard H Eyde 1988 Comprehending Cornus puzzles and progress in the systematics of the dogwoods Botanical Review 54 3 233 351 doi 10 1007 bf02868985 JSTOR 4354115 S2CID 12507834 Fan Chuanzhu Xiang Qiu Yun 2001 Phylogenetic relationships within Cornus Cornaceae based on 26S rDNA sequences American Journal of Botany 88 6 1131 1138 doi 10 2307 2657096 JSTOR 2657096 PMID 11410478 Zhiang Qiu Yun Thomas David T Zhang Wenheng Manchester Steven R Murrell Zack 2006 Species level phylogeny of the genus Cornus Cornaceae based on molecular and morphological evidence implications for taxonomy and Tertiary intercontinental migration Taxon 55 1 Retrieved 29 January 2016 Nowicki Marcin Boggess Sarah L Saxton Arnold M Hadziabdic Denita Xiang Qiu Yun Jenny Molnar Thomas Huff Matthew L Staton Margaret E Zhao Yichen 2018 10 23 Heinze Berthold ed Haplotyping of Cornus florida and C kousa chloroplasts Insights into species level differences and patterns of plastic DNA variation in cultivars PLOS ONE 13 10 e0205407 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1305407N doi 10 1371 journal pone 0205407 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 6198962 PMID 30352068 Cornus oblonga Wall Plants For A Future Retrieved February 9 2022 Tropicos Name Cornus peruviana J F Macbr www tropicos org Retrieved 2016 01 29 Macbride J F 1959 Cornaceae Flora of Peru Vol 13 pt 5 no 1 Field Museum pp 44 45 Manchester S R Xiang X P Xiang Q Y 2010 Fruits of Cornelian Cherries Cornaceae Cornus Subg Cornus in the Paleocene and Eocene of the Northern Hemisphere PDF International Journal of Plant Sciences 171 8 882 891 doi 10 1086 655771 S2CID 83524109 permanent dead link Manchester S R 1994 Fruits and Seeds of the Middle Eocene Nut Beds Flora Clarno Formation Oregon Palaeontographica Americana 58 30 31 Cornus florida Cornus kousa Landscape Plants Images identification and information Oregon State University Retrieved 20 May 2011 Find Official State Flower for USA Teleflora www teleflora com List of State Trees State Symbols USA statesymbolsusa org Jenkins Mary Tom 2021 03 31 The Six Little Winters of Tennessee Visit Cleveland TN Retrieved 2023 12 28 What is Dogwood Winter Farmers Almanac Archived from the original on 2011 05 03 Retrieved 2011 05 20 Morrow Anne 1956 Dogwood New York Pantheon Books pp 38 39 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cornus nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Cornus Dogwood history and uses Cornus in Flora of China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cornus amp oldid 1192652689, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.