A species of this plant, ie, very similar to the associated picture, grows wild and profusely in the sandy hills in northern Bay County,...Read More FL. Currently, early April, the plants are just terminating flowering. This terrain is not wet or swampy and is in fact fairly well-drained.
Cyrilla parvifolia is often thought of just as an extreme of variation in Cyrilla racemiflora, with smaller leaves and generally smaller ...Read Morestature. However, I think they are justified as two distinct species. Cyrilla racemiflora (in the U.S.) is most often found in swamps associated with streams and lakes, in generally flowing water. Cyrilla parviflora is found in depressional wetlands with no surface outlet, often mucky or peaty soils developing, and extends out from these wetlands into poorly drained flatwoods or savannas on Spodosols. It is much like the habitat difference between Taxodium distichum and Taxodium ascendens, also a species pair sometimes lumped together.
A species of this plant, ie, very similar to the associated picture, grows wild and profusely in the sandy hills in northern Bay County,...Read More
Cyrilla parvifolia is often thought of just as an extreme of variation in Cyrilla racemiflora, with smaller leaves and generally smaller ...Read More