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Dorstenia – Gardening in the Coastal Southeast

The Genus Dorstenia
Family Moraceae

This is a small genus of herbaceous and woody plants native to Africa and South America, with a single species in Asia. A few are grown as ornamentals in warm climates and greenhouses.

The mulberry family, Moraceae, is a large family with many members throughout the world’s tropics. It includes herbaceous perennials, shrubs, vines and trees. A few members of this family are cold hardy enough to grow as far north as zone 8b. Osage orange (Maclura) and mulberry (Morus) may be the best known plants to gardeners north of zone 9.  Breadfruit and jackfruit (Artocarpus) are well-known tropical trees that produce edible fruits.

Dorstenia elata

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Dorstenia elata

(no English common name)

This is a herbaceous plant with a subterranean stem and shiny leaves about nine to ten inches long. It is native to Brazil. Flowers are embedded in a dish-shaped disk that botanists call a receptacle. At maturity, the seeds are ejected several feet from the parent. As a result, it can be somewhat weedy in greenhouses and subtropical gardens. Remove the receptacles before the fruits mature to prevent its spread. It grows in moist, partly shady to shady site. Most reports state that it is cold hardy in zone 10.

This plant may be found in specialty catalogs. It is easily propagated by seeds. It is listed sometimes as Congo fig although it is not from Africa and it is not a fig.

This plant did not survive winter lows in the upper teens F in my upper zone 9a garden. It grows very well outdoors for a friend who lives about thirty miles south in zone 9a where winter lows are more likely to be in the mid- to upper 20’s F. Dorstenia contrajerva is a related plant with pubescent, lobed leaves that is reported to have escaped cultivation in one area of northeast Florida.


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Dorstenia elata flowers in a receptacle
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Nyssa – Gardening in the Coastal Southeast

The Genus Nyssa
Family Cornaceae

This is a small genus of trees native to North America and Asia. Three species are native to the Coastal Southeast. These trees are the source of the nectar that honey bees turn into tupelo honey. None is common in nurseries but one species (N. sylvatica) occurs naturally in moist areas throughout the region.

In addition to the genus Nyssa, the family Cornaceae includes a few genera that are found in gardens, happy tree (Campotheca,) dogwood (Cornus) and dove tree (Davidia.)

 

Nyssa aquatica

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Nyssa aquatica (Jacksonville Zoo)

water tupelo 

This is a large deciduous tree with a straight trunk that can grow to one hundred feet tall. Trunks of mature trees are swollen at the base, or buttressed. The leaves are up to eight inches long. The dark purple fruits are about one to one-and-a-half inches long. It grows well in swampy, wet areas in full sun or part shade. I find little information about this tree’s cold hardiness but it looks as though it grows naturally from zone 7a to 9a.

These trees are not easy to find, even in native plant nurseries. Plants are propagated by seeds.

I planted a few trees along a waterway in zone 9a. They have grown well and at a steady rate. This tree has specific cultural requirements but it is a beauty in the right, wet place.


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Nyssa aquatica (Ebenezer Swamp, Georgia)

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Nyssa aquatica leaves

Nyssa ogeechee

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Nyssa ogeechee on the St. Mary’s River

Ogeechee lime

This is medium-sized deciduous tree that can grow to forty feet tall or more. It can have one or more trunks that are distinctively swollen at the base. The large leaves are up to six inches long. Small flowers are followed by one-and-a-half to two inch long fruits that turn bright red at maturity. The fruits are sour to the taste. They are used locally for flavoring drinks and jellies. The plant grows in sun to part shade in a wet soil. This tree survives flooding and has been suggested for heavy, clay soils. It is recommended for zones 7 to 9.

This plant is rare in local nurseries and catalogs. Check with native plant specialists. Plants are propagated by seeds.

This plant has a moderate growth rate, slower in a well-drained soil. It will take many years for a young tree to develop the stout trunk that is pictured here.


Nyssa sylvatica

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Nyssa sylvatica

black gum

This is a medium-sized deciduous tree that can grow to sixty feet tall or more, typically with a single straight trunk that lacks the dramatic swelling of its base found in the other species. It ranges naturally across most of eastern North America. Flowers are inconspicuous. Half inch long, oval fruits are blue-black at maturity. Further north, this tree is well known for its bright red fall color. Typically, it grows in moist sites but it makes a deep taproot quickly from seed and is fairly drought tolerant once established. It is reported to be moderately salt tolerant. It is recommended for zones 3 to 9.

Plants are uncommon in native plant nurseries and catalogs. It may be propagated by seeds, air layering and cuttings, although cuttings are reported to be not easy.

This is a naturally occurring native in my upper zone 9a garden. It flowers in late April. The fruits ripen in September and October. Even if it were not an attractive tree, I would grow it for the birds that it attracts when the fruits are ripe. Notable are the bluebirds, pileated woodpeckers, and catbirds. Occasionally, I see migrating tanagers and veeries in these trees. Some of the individual trees have fruits that I find tart but palatable while others bear fruit that are bitter to my taste. In my garden, a few leaves start to turn red a few at a time starting in mid-August. They drop off little by little until the tree is bare in October. It is the first of my trees to lose its leaves in fall. New leaves start to appear relatively late, at the very last of March and early April.