Author | L. | |
Distribution | Throughout the state, though scarce (or not well-collected) in the far northeastern counties.
This is a widespread Eastern species, ranging from eastern Canada south to nearly all of FL and to eastern TX. | |
Abundance | Common and widespread across the state, except rare to uncommon in the northeastern portion. | |
Habitat | This species occurs in a great array of forested habitats. It is most common in mixed hardwood-conifer forests, but also is found in bottomland forests, rich slopes of hardwood forests, in some pine forests, and close to wooded stream banks. | |
Phenology | Blooms from May to June, and fruits from June to July. Some fruits can remain red into the winter if not eaten by animals. | |
Identification | This is a very familiar and completely unmistakable plant. It has a creeping stem and evergreen leaves, on a stem to about 8 inches long, rooting at nodes. The small rounded leaves, about the size of a fingernail, are opposite, leathery, and dark green. The flowers are twinned, in pairs with a single united ovary. Each flower is tubular, white, about 1/2-inch long, with 4 flared lobes that are fuzzy on the inside. A single red berry forms soon after flowering at each pair of flowers. This is a species that can practically be seen on any woodland walk in most of the state. | |
Taxonomic Comments | None
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Other Common Name(s) | None | |
State Rank | S5 | |
Global Rank | G5 | |
State Status | | |
US Status | | |
USACE-agcp | FACU link |
USACE-emp | FACU link |