Ceratiola

Michaux

Fl. Bor.-Amer. 2: 221. 1803 ,.

Common names: Sand heath Florida rosemary
Etymology: Greek keration, little horn, alluding to style branches
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 8. Treatment on page 490. Mentioned on page 374, 489.
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Subshrubs or shrubs, (dioecious, aromatic). Stems erect, (diffusely branched; branches numerous, ascending); old twigs rough with persistent leaf bases, young twigs tomentose. Leaves persistent, whorled; petiole present; blade coriaceous, margins entire. Inflorescences axillary, fascicles, 2–3-flowered; perulae absent. Flowers unisexual (dioecious), radially symmetric; sepals 2(–3), distinct; petals 2(–3), distinct, corolla persistent, ovoid; stamens 2, exserted; anthers without awns, longitudinally dehiscent; ovary 2-locular; style exserted, straight; stigma linear. Fruits drupaceous, globose, dry. Seeds (pyrenes) 2, planoconvex, not winged, not tailed; testa ± smooth. x = 13.

Distribution

se United States.

Discussion

Species 1: se United States.

Ceratiola was treated formerly within Empetraceae, along with Corema and Empetrum. Phylogenetic studies based on morphological and molecular data (A. A. Anderberg 1994c; K. A. Kron et al. 2002; Li J. H. et al. 2002) indicate that the Empetrum and Ceratiola + Corema lineages form a monophyletic group nested consistently within Ericaceae. The phylogenetic relationship between Ceratiola and the North American species of Corema is not resolved fully, and molecular data suggest possible ancestral hybridization events between Ceratiola ericoides and Corema conradii (Li et al.). Ceratiola differs from Corema by having two to three flowers in leaf axils, petals present, and two seeds per fruit. Empetrum is distinguished readily from Ceratiola by having solitary flowers in leaf axils and six to nine carpels and a corresponding number of seeds per fruit.

Species 1