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Compilation
Carpinus americana

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Filed as Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE]
Type of Ostrya americana F.Michx. [family CORYLACEAE]
Syntype of Carpinus americana Donn.Sm. [family BETULACEAE]
Filed as Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE]
Type? of Carpinus americana Michx. subsp. tropicalis Donn.Sm. [family CORYLACEAE]
Filed as Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE]
Filed as Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE]
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Name

Identification
Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE ] (stored under name); Verified by Not on Sheet, Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE ] Verified by S., D., Carpinus americana Michx. [family CORYLACEAE ] Verified by Not on Sheet,
Related name
  • Carpinus americana

Flora

Entry for Carpinus caroliniana Walter [family CORYLACEAE]
Herbarium
Flora of North America (FNA)
Collection
Flora of North America
Resource Type
Reference Sources
Entry From
Flora of North America, Vol 3,
Names
Carpinus caroliniana Walter [family CORYLACEAE], Fl. Carol., 236. 1788
Carpinus americana Michaux [family CORYLACEAE]
Information
Trees, to 12 m; trunks short, often crooked, longitudinally or transversely fluted, crowns spreading. Bark gray, smooth to somewhat roughened. Wood whitish, extremely hard, heavy. Winter buds containing inflorescences squarish in cross section, somewhat divergent, 3--4 mm. Leaf blade ovate to elliptic, 3--12 × 3--6 cm, margins doubly serrate, teeth typically obtuse and evenly arranged, primary teeth often not much longer than secondary; surfaces abaxially slightly to moderately pubescent, especially on major veins, with or without conspicuous dark glands. Inflorescences: staminate inflorescences 2--6 cm; pistillate inflorescences 1--2.5 cm. Infructescences 2.5--12 cm; bracts relatively uncrowded, 2--3.5 × 1.4--2.8 cm, lobes narrow, elongate, apex nearly acute, obtuse, or rounded, central lobe (1--)2--3 cm.
Discussion
Carpinus caroliniana consists of two rather well-marked geographical races, treated here as subspecies. These hybridize or intergrade in a band extending from Long Island along the Atlantic coast through coastal Virginia and North Carolina, and then westward in northern South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana. Plants with intermediate features are also found throughout the highlands of Missouri and Arkansas. J. J. Furlow (1987b) has described the variation of this complex in detail.
Native Americans used Carpinus caroliniana medicinally to treat flux, navel yellowness, cloudy urine, Italian itch, consumption, diarrhea, and constipation, as an astringent, a tonic, and a wash, and to facilitate childbirth (D. E. Moerman 1986; no subspecies specified).

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