Difference between revisions of "Oxydendrum"

de Candolle in A. P. de Candolle and A. L. P. P. de Candolle

in A. P. de Candolle and A. L. P. P. de Candolle, Prodr. 7: 601. 1839 ,.

Common names: Sourwood sorrel-tree
Etymology: Greek oxys, sour, and dendron, tree, alluding to taste of twigs and leaves
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 8. Treatment on page 496. Mentioned on page 372, 376, 497.
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Revision as of 20:31, 24 September 2019

Shrubs or trees. Stems erect; twigs glabrous or puberulent. Leaves deciduous; blade elliptic-oblong to elliptic, ovate, or obovate, ± chartaceous, margins irregularly compound-serrate or serrulate, especially distally, or entire (sometimes fringed with elongate hairs, especially when juvenile or on stump sprouts), plane, surfaces multicellular elongate-hairy (hairs stout) on midvein (rarely also secondary veins) abaxially, sometimes such hairs also on midvein and lamina adaxially, or such hairs absent, and ± sparsely unicellular-hairy on both surfaces of midvein or such hairs absent; venation brochidodromous. Inflorescences terminal panicles composed of arching-declinate racemes or secondary panicles, 15–50-flowered, (borne on shoots of current season). Pedicels: bracteoles 2, medial or distal. Flowers: sepals 5, connate slightly to 1/2 their lengths, lanceolate; petals 5, connate ca. 3/4 their lengths, white, corolla urceolate to cylindric-urceolate, lobes much shorter than tube, (densely unicellular-hairy, hairs short to elongate, crisped to straight); stamens 10, slightly exserted; filaments straight, flat, hairy, without spurs; anthers without awns, dehiscent by slitlike pores, with white line of disintegration tissue on each lobe abaxially; pistil 5-carpellate; ovary 5-locular; stigma capitate-truncate. Fruits capsular, ovoid, (with very slightly thickened sutures), dry. Seeds 25–100, narrowly oblong, (tailed); testa cells elongate. x = 12.

Distribution

e United States.

Discussion

Species 1: e United States.

Oxydendrum had been considered to be isolated from other genera of tribe Andromedeae Klotzsch (P. F. Stevens 1971; C. E. Wood Jr. 1961). Recent phylogenetic analyses (K. A. Kron et al. 2002) support those earlier views, placing the genus as the sister group of the clade including such genera as Andromeda, Gaultheria, Lyonia, and Vaccinium. Oxydendrum is now, therefore, assigned to its own tribe, Oxydendreae H. T. Cox.

Species 1

Selected References

None.

... more about "Oxydendrum"
Walter S. Judd +
de Candolle in A. P. de Candolle and A. L. P. P. de Candolle +
Sourwood +  and sorrel-tree +
e United States. +
Greek oxys, sour, and dendron, tree, alluding to taste of twigs and leaves +
in A. P. de Candolle and A. L. P. P. de Candolle, Prodr. +
Oxydendrum +
Ericaceae subfam. Vaccinioideae +