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About Dogwoods:

The Dogwoods comprise a group of 30-50 species of mostly deciduous woody plants growing as shrubs and trees, some species are herbaceous perennial plants and a few of the woody species are evergreen. This is the fanlisting only for dogwood trees. They are in the family Cornaceae, divided into one to nine genera or subgenera (depending on botanical interpretation). Four subgenera are enumerated here:

 

Taxonomy:
Kingdom: Plantae. Division: Magnoliophyta. Class: Magnoliopsida. Order: Cornales. Family: Cornaceae. Genus: Cornus. Subgenera: Cornus, Swida, Chamaepericlymenum, Benthamidia.

 

Flower clusters semi-showy, usually white or yellow, in cymes with large showy bracts, fruit red, blue or white:

 

--(Sub)genus Cornus. Cornels; four species of shrubs or small trees; flower clusters with a deciduous involucre.

--(Sub)genus Swida. Dogwoods; about 20-30 species of shrubs; flower clusters without an involucre.

Flower clusters inconspicuous, usually greenish, surrounded by large, showy petal-like bracts; fruit usually red:

 

--(Sub)genus Chamaepericlymenum. Bunchberries or Dwarf cornels; two species of creeping subshrubs growing from woody stolons.

  • Cornus canadensis (Chamaepericlymenum canadense; Canadian Dwarf Cornel or Bunchberry) Northern North America.
  • Cornus suecica (Chamaepericlymenum suecicum; Eurasian Dwarf Cornel or Bunchberry). Northern Eurasia, locally in extreme northeast and northwest North America.
  • Cornus × unalaschkensis (hybrid C. canadensis × C. suecica). Aleutian Islands, Greenland, Labrador.

--(Sub)genus Benthamidia (syn. subgenus Dendrobenthamia, subgenus Cynoxylon). Flowering dogwoods; five species of trees, divisible into two subgroups (Benthamidia, with individual drupes, and Dendrobenthamia, with the drupes coalaced into a compound fruit).

 

Characteristics of Dogwood:
Most species have opposite leaves and a few have alternate. The fruit of all species is a drupe with one or two seeds. Flowers have four parts. Many species in subgenus Swida are stoloniferous shrubs, growing along waterways. Several of these are used in naturalizing landscape plantings, especially the species with bright red or bright yellow stems. Most of the species in subgenus Benthamidia are small trees used as ornamental plants. The fruit of several species in the subgenera Cornus and Benthamidia is edible, though without much flavour. The berries of those in subgenus Swida are mildly toxic to people, though readily eaten by birds. Dogwoods are used as food plants by the larvae of some Lepidoptera species including Emperor Moth, The Engrailed, 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 (The latter three feed exclusively on Cornus). They were used by pioneers to brush their teeth. The pioneers would peel off the bark, bite the twig and then scrub their teeth.

 

Etymology and Other Meanings:
The word dogwood comes from dagwood, from the use of the slender stems of very hard wood for making 'dags' (daggers, skewers). The wood was also highly prized for making loom shuttles, arrows, tool handles, and other small items that required a very hard and strong wood. Larger items were also made of dogwood such as the screw in basket-style wine or fruit presses, also made were the first styles of the tennis racket made out of the bark cut in thin strips. Another earlier name of the dogwood in English is the whipple-tree. Geoffrey Chaucer uses the word whippletree in the Canterbury Tales (The Knight's Tale, verse 2065) to refer to the dogwood. Another larger item made of dogwood still bears the name of the tree from which it is carved. The whippletree is an element of the traction of a horse-drawn cart, which links the drawpole of the cart to the harnesses of the horses in file.The name Dog-Tree entered English vocabulary by 1548, and had been further transformed to Dogwood by 1614. Once the name dogwood was affixed to the 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). It is possible that the common name of Dogwood may have come because “dogs were washed with a brew of its bark, hence Dogwood.” Another name is blood-twig, due to the red colour it turns in autumn. In botany and in colloquial use, the term dogwood winter may be used to describe a cold snap in spring.

 

Links:

Wikipedia: Dogwood

United States National Arboretum: Dogwood Questions and Answers

Ozark and Ouachita Mountains Fanlistings

 

Contact Me:

If you would like to reach me, my name is Melora and my email is melorasworld+@+gmail.com. Please remove the +'s signs. They're there to keep my email bot-free. If you would simply like to leave a comment, question, correction, concern, suggestion, etc... just visit my fanlisting thread.

 

Site Credits:

I built the site in Photoshop and Dreamweaver. The fonts came from dafont.com. The information on this page came from Wikipedia's Dogwood entry.