Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida): Spring's Early White, Pink, Salmon, or Red Pastels
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As a predictable harbinger of spring, flowering dogwood steadfastly crowns its twigs with floral buds which promise to burst open into floral magnificence in accordance with nature's plan.
Cornus florida is commonly known as flowering dogwood. Its synonymous scientific name, Benthamidia florida (L.) Spach, highlights its subgenus, Benthamidia. Flowering dogwood is in the family Cornaceae, which, among other traits, typically have branches with clusters of flowers on each stem (inflorescence). Cornus florida has two subspecies which distinguish its geographical occurrence.
Native to eastern North America, Cornus florida subspecies florida ranges from its northern extent in southern Maine and southern Ontario to its southern extent in northern Florida and west beyond the Florida panhandle all the way into eastern Texas.
The other subspecies, Cornus florida subspecies urbiniana (Rose) Rickett, is native elsewhere in North America: in Estado Libre y Soberano de Nuevo León (“Free and Sovereign State of Nuevo Leon”) and Estado Libre y Soberano de Veracruz de Ignacio de la Llave (“Free and Sovereign State of Veracruz of Ignacio de la Llave”), which are in northeastern and eastern Mexico, respectively. This subspecies has a scientific synonym, Cornus urbiniana Rose.
Externals: What flowering dogwood looks like
Flowers appear in early spring in southern locations. Each dogwood flower has four yellow-green petals. With their small flowers, numbering about twenty, clustering together into a flower-like structure, flowering dogwood exhibits the typical inflorescence of its family, Cornaceae. The shape of these flower heads (pseudanthia, from Greek for “false flower”) is known as umbel because the pedicels (the stalks that attach each individual flower to the main stem of the flower head), with their equal lengths branching out from a common point, are reminiscent of the ribs of an umbrella.
Fanning out from the base of the flower head are four bracts (Latin: bractea “a thin plate of metal”), which are specialized leaflike parts. The bract’s rounded outline distinctively notches at its apex. Each bract is about two inches (five centimeters) in length. The natural coloring for bracts is snow white, but other occasional colors in the wild are light pink or salmon. Pink and red bracts are propagated by commercial nurseries.
Flowering dogwood leaves are simple, meaning that they are not subdivided as, for example, oak leaves are. Leaves are paired on opposite sides of the stem. Broad at the base and tapering to a point, leaves are described as ovate (Latin: ovatus “egg-shaped”) and measure 3 to 6 inches (7.6 to 15 centimeters) in length. Their width hovers from 1.5 to 3 inches (3.8 to 7.6 centimeters).
As a deciduous tree, flowering dogwood sheds its leaves seasonally in a process called abscission (Latin: ab “away” + scindere “to cut”). Their autumn color, signalling abscission, is in the red spectrum, from reddish brown to reddish purple.
With a fleshy outside and a two-celled shell enclosing two seeds inside, Cornus florida’s fruit is categorized as a drupe, with three to four clustering together. Drupes measure about 0.5 inches (13 millimeters) in length, with a diameter of 0.25 inches (6 millimeters). In early autumn the orange to red coloring of the drupes contrast brightly with the red brown richness of flowering dogwood leaves.
Cornus florida bark is black, brown, or dark gray in color. Broken up into small rectangular or square plates, its bark is reminiscent of alligator skin.
With a maximum height of 10 to 30 feet (3 to 9.15 meters), flowering dogwood is an understory, a small tree that easily grows in the shade of taller trees below the forest canopy (the topmost area of the forest habitat as delineated by the crowns of the tallest trees). Its spreading branches make its width exceed its height.
Flowering dogwood has a maximum lifespan of about 125 years.
Faunal popularity: Beneficial as well as ornamental
Flowering dogwood trees’ graceful lines and pleasing appearance ensure their popularity as ornamentals, which are plants and trees that are cultivated, i.e., grown, for their decorative value. In addition to their ornamental asset, flowering dogwoods attract a variety of wildlife with their cafeteria-style offerings of scrumptious bark, flowers, fruit, leaves, seeds, and twigs.
At least thirty-six bird species, including ruffed grouse (Bonasa umbellus), bobwhite quail (Colinus virginianus), and wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo), consume their fruit. Joining them in the fruit feast are mammals ranging from chipmunks (genusTamias) and squirrels (family Sciuridae) to beaver (genus Castor), rabbits (family Leporidae), and skunks (family Mephitidae) and even black bears (Ursus americanus) and deer (family Cervidae).
Both rabbits and deer graze dogwood foliage and twigs.
Commercial usage and health-medicinal remedies
Prior to the invention of plastic shuttles, dogwood was harvested primarily for manufacturing textile weaving shuttles. As a hard, smooth, close-textured wood, Cornus florida’s resilience and durability are desirable in specialty products such as jewelers’ blocks, malletheads, small pulleys, and spools.
Historically a tea of dogwood bark substituted for scarce quinine in the treatment of malaria during the American Civil War (1861 to 1865) in the southern United States. The bark’s astringency served as an effective febrifuge in treating fevers and an effective anti-diarrhetic. Also bark was applied in a softened, moist mush as a hot poultice (Latin: puls, pultes “porridge”) for sores.
Native Americans cleaned their teeth by chewing dogwood twigs, which after a few minutes split the fibers at the ends into a fine, soft brush.
Flowering Dogwood: The artistry of its harmonious lines and colors
Cornus florida gently unfurls its loveliness in a profusion of white or pastel. This gracious tree casts a sweet spell on its beholders. It is the state tree of both Missouri and Virginia, and its delicate flower is North Carolina's state flower.
Indeed, the memory of its soft welcome of spring lingers, and even a first lady of the United States was enchanted by the artistry of its harmonious lines and colors. Wife of the twenty-third president, Caroline Lavinia Scott Harrison (October 1, 1832–October 25, 1892) was taught watercolor painting by James Henry Moser (January 1, 1854-November 10, 1913). Artistically, she enjoyed floral motifs. She painted "Flowering Dogwood" during her brief tenure as first lady, from March 4, 1889 until her death from tuberculosis on October 25, 1892.
As evinced in First Lady Caroline Harrison's painting, the intrinsic loveliness of flowering dogwood is easily evoked in art. Flowering dogwood is also photogenic as the camera finds no distractions or disruptions in the simple interplay of the tree's outlines and colors.
Artistic representations honor its worthiness as a visual subject, but they can never replace the serene vista of flowering dogwoods in their element in the natural landscape as they announce spring's awakening.
Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.
Sources Consulted
Brand, Mark H. (Dr.) “Cornus florida Flowering Dogwood.” UConn Plant Database. University of Connecticut Department of Plant Science, Storrs CT.
Erichsen-Brown, Charlotte. Medicinal and Other Uses of North American Plants: A Historical Survey with Special Reference to the Eastern Indian Tribes. New York: Dover Publications, 1989.
McLemore, B.F. “Cornus florida L., Flowering Dogwood.” Silvics of North America. Volume 2: Hardwoods. Agriculture Handbook 654. Washington, DC: U.S.D.A. Forest Service, December 1990.
Copyright
Copyright Thursday, April 28, 2011 by Derdriu. Updated Wednesday, March 21, 2012.
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Derdriu, Oh for the early spring blossoms of flowering dogwood! They are readying already for their emergence, I'm sure! Spring is in the air, even though there were light, gentle snow showers which coated my hair and eyelashes today!
Kind regards, Stessily
Two of my dogwoods are budding and look like they are ready to bloom. The third looks like it is going to try. The cardinals have already returned to reclaim their territory, though one of them looks to be young and new. The redbud tree has bloomed. Of the flowers, the pink bleeding heart is out, but the white one looks like it is still bushing out. Several other types have been out and are already beginning to fade. For the most part though, the weeds and wild onion rule the day.
Great article about the dogwoods.
Thanks, the yard gets comments from passerby all the time, but they grow more infrequent as my own green thumb and attempts to avoid poison ivy undo all the good work done by the gardener who owned the property before me. The poison ivy thing was sad. I even did a Before and After Hub on it that showed what the yard looked like as sources of the ivy were located and removed. Didn't get them all, but the third dogwood was added as part of that.
Ah, the sight and scent of flowering dogwood! I feel like I'm surrounded by their loveliness by reading your article.










Greensleeves Hubs Level 6 Commenter 6 months ago
Derdriu, a very informative and comprehensive study of a tree which is much more attractive than its name! (Why is it called 'dogwood' anyway - do we know?) I love the close up of the flower, and it's interesting to see the painting by Caroline Harrison. Useful to see the leaves and fruit too, for anyone who wants to identify the tree when not in flower. A fine page and well presented. Alun.