Roundleaf dogwood

Cornus rugosa

''Cornus rugosa'', commonly called roundleaf dogwood, is a deciduous tree native to northern parts of the eastern and central United States and southern parts of central and eastern Canada.
Cornus rugosa (Round-leaved Dogwood) On a rock outcrop at the edge of a deciduous forest. Cornus rugosa,Geotagged,Round-leaved Dogwood,Roundleaf dogwood,Summer,United States,berries,blue berries,shrub

Appearance

''Cornus rugosa'' is a shrub or small tree, 1–4 m tall, with yellowish-green twigs that may have red or purple blotches. Pith is white. Leafs are oppositely arranged, round orbicularly shaped with an acuminate tip, have an entire margin, and are woolly to hairless below. Leaves have 6-8 pairs of lateral veins and 7–15 cm long. Leaf scars are broadly U-shaped with 3 bundle scars.

White flowers appear in early summer arranged on flat topped cymes. The flowers themselves are pedunculate with 4 calyx lobes and 4 petals. The cymes are 3–6 cm wide and contain 20–50 flowers. Fruits are blue to greenish white drupe that matures in October.

Roundleaf dogwood prefers well drained to normal moisture soil and, like most dogwoods, is shade tolerant.
Cornus rugosa (Round-leaved Dogwood) On a rock outcrop at the edge of a deciduous forest. Cornus rugosa,Geotagged,Round-leaved Dogwood,Roundleaf dogwood,Summer,United States,berries,blue berries,shrub

Habitat

Roundleaf dogwood is a host species for the spring azure and gossamer wings.

Fruits are eaten by ruffed grouse and sharp-tailed grouse. Twigs are consumed by white tailed deer, Eastern cottontail, and mice.

References:

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Status: Unknown
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Taxonomy
KingdomPlantae
DivisionAngiosperms
ClassEudicots
OrderCornales
FamilyCornaceae
GenusCornus
SpeciesC. rugosa