The 'Red Osier Dogwood' (''Cornus sericea'',
syn. ''C. stolonifera'', ''Swida sericea'') is a species of
dogwood native throughout northern and western
North America from
Alaska east to
Newfoundland, south to
Durango and
Nuevo León in the west, and
Illinois and
Virginia in the east. Other names include 'Redtwig Dogwood', 'Red-rood', 'Red rood', 'American Dogwood', and (subsp. ''occidentalis'') 'Western Dogwood'. In the wild, it commonly grows in areas of damp soil, such as
wetlands.
It is a medium to tall
deciduous shrub, growing 1.5-4 m tall and 3-5 m wide, spreading readily by underground
stolons to form dense thickets. The branches and twigs are dark red, although wild plants may lack this coloration in shaded areas. The
leaves are opposite, 5-12 cm long and 2.5-6 cm broad, with an ovate to oblong shape and an entire margin; they are dark green above and glaucous below; fall color is commonly bright red to purple. The
flowers are small (5-10 mm diameter), dull white in color, in clusters 3-6 cm diameter. The
fruit is a globose white
berry 5-9 mm diameter.
Cornus sericea is a popular ornamental shrub that is often planted for the red coloring of its twigs in the dormant season.
It is a variable species, with two
subspecies commonly accepted:
★ ''Cornus sericea'' subsp. ''sericea'' - throughout the range of the species. Shoots and leaves hairless or finely pubescent; flower petals 2-3 mm.
★ ''Cornus sericea'' subsp. ''occidentalis'' (Torr. & A.Gray) Fosberg - western North America. Shoots and leaves densely pubescent; flower petals 3-4.5 mm.
References
★
Wild Flowers Worth Knowing, Blanchan, Neltje, , , Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, 2005,
External links
★
USDA ARS Germplasm Resources Information Network: ''Cornus sericea''
★
NRCS: USDA Plants Profile: ''Cornus sericea''
★
Jepson Flora of California: ''Cornus sericea'';
subsp. ''sericea'',
subsp. ''occidentalis''.
★
''Cornus sericea'' ssp. ''sericea'' images at bioimages.vanderbilt.edu