Clethra cf. alnifolia Linnaeus, 1753
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26879/550 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039E0517-F664-FFB7-D24A-3BA0FDA6FA7F |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Clethra cf. alnifolia Linnaeus, 1753 |
status |
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Clethra cf. alnifolia Linnaeus, 1753 View in CoL
Figure 2.2–2.3 View FIGURE 2
Description. One partial leaf is identified as Clethra sp. , measuring 4 cm long and 2.5 cm wide. The leaf is simple, petiolate, obovate. The margin is unlobed, serrate. The base is incomplete, but was probably acute. Primary venation is pinnate. Secondary venation is semicraspedodromous and excurrent. Secondaries emerge from the midrib at approximately 45°. Tertiary veins are mixed-percurrent (both alternate and opposite percurrent); some of the opposite percurrent veins are sinuous, but most are straight. Quaternary venation is predominantly regular reticulate, occasionally irregularly reticulate. Quinternary veins are regular, reticulate. Teeth are of a single order, small, irregularly spaced, the number increasing distally. Tooth sinuses are generally round, teeth straight/convex proximally, straight/concave distally. On some teeth all that is visible is a long, mucronate apex, a characteristic common to modern forms of C. alnifolia .
Site Occurrence. Perdido Park.
Remarks. Clethra today encompasses approximately 65 species, but only three occur in North America. Clethra acuminata occurs mostly in montane woodlands. Clethra alnifolia and C. tomentosa are found at lower elevations and in wetland areas. Of these two, C. alnifolia ( Figure 2.4 View FIGURE 2 ) has a wider distribution and is found mainly along the coastal plain from southern Maine to northern Florida and then westward to southeastern Texas. Fossil flowers within the core Ericales somewhat comparable to those of the Clethraceae have been found from Late Cretaceous deposits of Georgia, USA. ( Schönenberger et al., 2012). Fruits and seeds of Clethra have been described from the middle Miocene of Europe ( Friis, 1985).
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