Cyrilla racemiflora L.
Family: Cyrillaceae
Little-Leaf Titi
[Cyrilla antillana Michx.,  more...]
Cyrilla racemiflora image

Plants to 10 m, frequently forming dense thickets. Leaves: petiole distinct; blade green, oblanceolate to elliptic, 1-10 × 0.5-2.5 cm, chartaceous to coriaceous, base cuneate, apex acute, rounded, or emarginate. Flowers fragrant; petals white or creamy white, 2.5-3.5 mm. Fruits ovoid to subglobose, 2-2.5 mm.

Flowering May-Jul, sometimes again Sep-Oct. Bottomlands, swamps, stream margins, streamheads and baygalls, acidic seepage bogs, peat-based pocosins, Carolina bays, cypress-gum depressions in pine savannas, wet flatwoods; 0-200 m; Ala., Del., Fla., Ga., La., Miss., N.C., S.C., Tex., Va.; s Mexico; West Indies; Central America; n South America.

Populations of Cyrilla racemiflora in northern Florida and southern Georgia often comprise individuals with smaller leaves (1-4 × 0.5-1 cm), inflorescences (4-9 cm), and petals (to 3 mm), and have been segregated by some authors as C. parvifolia (A. S. Weakley 2007). As noted by R. K. Godfrey and J. W. Wooten (1981) and other authors, this combination of characters represents but one extreme of a pattern of morphological intergradation so broad that only a single species can be recognized unequivocally.

Reproduction in Cyrilla racemiflora is largely vegetative. The shallow, nearly horizontal roots produce ascending shoots giving rise to extensive clones that often form dense thickets and may cover a sizeable area. The species is sometimes planted and has escaped locally, as in Delaware.

Shrub or small tree to 10(-20) m; lvs leathery, persistent through much of the winter, oblanceolate to obovate, 5-10 cm, the petiole 5-8 mm; racemes several, borne just below the leafy branches of the season, spreading, slender, 6-15 cm, floriferous to the base; bracts subulate, equaling or longer than the pedicels; pet white, oblanceolate, 3 mm, slightly surpassing the stamens; fr gray, round-ovoid to depressed-globose, 2-3 mm, excluding the persistent short, 2-3-lobed style; 2n=40. Swamps and wet woods on the coastal plain; se. Va. to Tex., s. into n. S. Amer. June.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

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