:''This article is about the box tree. For the receptacle, see
box.''

''Buxus sempervirens''

''Buxus microphylla'' foliage

''Buxus henryi'' foliage

''Buxus wallichiana'' foliage and seed capsules

''Buxus sempervirens'' bark

''Buxus sempervirens'' bark closeup
'''Buxus''' is a
genus of about 70 species in the family
Buxaceae. Common names include 'box' (majority of English-speaking countries) or 'boxwood' (North America).
The boxes are native to western and southern
Europe, southwest, southern and eastern
Asia,
Africa,
Madagascar, northernmost
South America,
Central America,
Mexico and the
Caribbean, with the majority of species tropical or subtropical; only the European and some Asian species are
frost-tolerant. Centres of diversity occur in
Cuba (about 30 species), China (17 species) and Madagascar (nine species).
They are slow-growing
evergreen shrubs and small
trees, growing to 2-12 m (rarely 15 m) tall. The
leaves are opposite, rounded to lanceolate, and leathery; they are small in most species, typically 1.5-5 cm long and 0.3-2.5 cm broad, but up to 11 cm long and 5 cm broad in ''B. macrocarpa''. The flowers are small and yellow-green,
monoecious with both sexes present on a plant. The
fruit is a small capsule 0.5-1.5 cm long (to 3 cm in ''B. macrocarpa''), containing several small
seeds.
The genus splits into three genetically distinct sections, each section in a different region, with the Eurasian species in one section, the African (except northwest Africa) and Madagascan species in the second, and the American species in the third. The African and American sections are genetically closer to each other than to the Eurasian section (Balthazar et al., 2000).
Selected species
;Europe, northwest Africa, Asia
★ ''
Buxus austro-yunnanensis'' ('Yunnan Box'; southwest China)
★ ''
Buxus balearica'' ('Balearic Box'; Balearic Islands, southern Spain, northwest Africa)
★ ''
Buxus bodinieri'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus cephalantha'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus cochinchensis'' (Malaysia)
★ ''
Buxus colchica'' ('Georgian Box'; western Caucasus)
★ ''
Buxus hainanensis'' ('Hainan Box'; China: Hainan)
★ ''
Buxus harlandii'' ('Harland's Box'; southern China)
★ ''
Buxus hebecarpa'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus henryi'' ('Henry's Box'; China)
★ ''
Buxus hyrcana'' ('Caspian Box'; Alborz, eastern Caucasus)
★ ''
Buxus ichangensis'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus latistyla'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus linearifolia'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus megistophylla'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus microphylla'' ('Japanese Box'; Korea, China; long cultivated in Japan)
★ ''
Buxus mollicula'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus myrica'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus papillosa'' (western Himalaya)
★ ''
Buxus pubiramea'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus rivularis'' (Philippines)
★ ''
Buxus rolfei'' (Borneo)
★ ''
Buxus rugulosa'' (China, eastern Himalaya)
★ ''
Buxus rupicola'' (Malaysia)
★ ''
Buxus sempervirens'' ('Common Box' or 'European Box'; western and southern Europe, except far southwest)
★ ''
Buxus sinica'' ('Chinese Box'; China, Korea, Japan)
★ ''
Buxus stenophylla'' (China)
★ ''
Buxus wallichiana'' ('Himalayan Box'; Himalaya)
;Africa, Madagascar
★ ''
Buxus acuminata'' (Africa: Zaire; syn. ''Notobuxus acuminata'')
★ ''
Buxus calcarea'' (Madagascar endemic)
★ ''
Buxus capuronii'' (Madagascar endemic)
★ ''
Buxus hildebrantii'' (eastern Africa: Somalia, Ethiopia)
★ ''
Buxus humbertii'' ('Humbert's Box'; Madagascar endemic)
★ ''
Buxus itremoensis'' (Madagascar endemic)
★ ''
Buxus lisowskii'' (Congo)
★ ''
Buxus macowanii'' ('Cape Box'; eastern and northern South Africa)
★ ''
Buxus macrocarpa'' (Madagascar endemic)
★ ''
Buxus madagascarica'' ('Madagascan Box'; Madagascar, Comoros)
★ ''
Buxus monticola'' (Madagascar endemic)
★ ''
Buxus moratii'' (Madagascar, Comoros)
★ ''
Buxus natalensis'' ('Natal Box'; eastern South Africa; syn. ''Notobuxus natalensis'')
★ ''
Buxus obtusifolia'' (eastern Africa; syn. ''Notobuxus obtusifolia'')
★ ''
Buxus rabenantoandroi'' (Madagascar endemic; syn. ''B. angustifolia'' GE Schatz & Lowry ''non'' Mill.)
;Americas
★ ''
Buxus aneura'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus bartletii'' (Central America)
★ ''
Buxus brevipes'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus citrifolia'' (Venezuela)
★ ''
Buxus crassifolia'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus ekmanii'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus excisa'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus heterophylla'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus imbricata'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus lancifolia'' (Mexico)
★ ''
Buxus macrophylla'' (Central America)
★ ''
Buxus mexicana'' (Mexico)
★ ''
Buxus muelleriana'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus olivacea'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus pilosula'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus portoricensis'' (Puerto Pico)
★ ''
Buxus pubescens'' (Mexico)
★ ''
Buxus rheedioides'' (Cuba)
★ ''
Buxus vahlii'' ('Vahl's Box' or 'Smooth Box'; Puerto Pico; syn. ''B. laevigata'')
Symbolism and uses
Boxes are commonly used for
hedges and
topiary, and the dense
wood (called "boxwood" in all countries) is valued for
wood carving and the making of wood type for printing. The inconspicuous flowers mean that boxes are usually only grown for their foliage. They are particularly favoured for hedges, topiary, and
mazes in formal gardens. Given time, neat low hedging can grow to enormous size, as at
Powis Castle in north
Wales. Often, however, they are kept dwarfed, as in the famous gardens at
Château Villandry in
France.
European Box has lent its name to several places in southern
England, for example
Bexhill-on-Sea in
Sussex and
Box Hill in
Surrey, and to other things, including the
Boxwood Festival for
flutists.
The
American Boxwood Society specializes in the study of boxwoods, and has produced a number of publications.
References
Balthazar, M. von, Peter K. Endress, P. K., and Qiu, Y.-L. 2000. Phylogenetic relationships in Buxaceae based on nuclear internal transcribed spacers and plastid ''ndhF'' sequences. ''Int. J. Plant Sci''. 161(5): 785–792 (available
online).
External links
★
About box (with ''Buxus'' distribution map)
★
Revision of the genus Buxus in Madagascar (pdf file)
★
American Boxwood Society
★
Woodtype museum