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Key J3: lianas with opposite simple leaves with entire margins {add Paederia in RUBIACEAE}
1 Fresh plants with white, milky juice; pistils 2, united only by the style and stigma; fruit a pair of linear or fusiformfollicles, 5-8× as long as thick (or longer), these variously shaped (terete, compressed, or prominently 3-angled)
2Lianaclimbing by twining (occasionally forming shrub-like masses); fruit either a capsule (< 3× as long as wide), paired berries, drupeaceous (Petrea in VERBENACEAE), or a schizocarp of samaras (MALPIGHIACEAE).
3 Flowers lavender; the showy calyx persisting well after petals fall; fruit drupe-like; [ornamental waif, c. and s. FL]
3 Flowers not lavender, instead white, yellow, orange, or red; the calyx not showy and not persisting after the petals fall; fruit a capsule (Gelsemium), paired berries (Lonicera) or a schizocarp of samaras (MALPIGHIACEAE); [collectively widespread natives and non-natives].
4Petals clawed (the bases noticeably thinner than the broadened tips), the corolla not tubular; fruit a schizocarp of samaras; [uncommon non-natives, c. and s. FL; in part, Heteropterys, Hiptage, and Stigmaphyllon]
4Petals not clawed, of similar width from base to tip, the corollatubular; fruit capsules (Gelsemium) or paired berries (Lonicera); [widespread natives and non-natives]
5 Flowers white, pale yellow, orange, or red, distinctly to obscurely bilaterally symmetrical; leaves widest slightly below, at, or above the middle, the apex rounded, obtuse, to broadly acute; fruit paired berries
3 Creeping or short subshrubs, the stems primarily prostrate (< 2 dm tall), or spreading-ascending to decumbent and < 3 dm tall (MALPIGHIACEAE, in part; Galphimia primarily erect subshrubs to 1 m tall, of TX only in our area).
4Petals clawed, the bases noticeably thinned compared to the broader tips; fruit schizocarps, breaking into 2-3 nutlets or 1-seeded cocci; [in part, Aspicarpa and Galphimia]
9 Scrambling shrubs, armed with recurved paired spines at the nodes (except Santalum, which can be a scrambling shrub and has red flowers producing drupe-like fruit bearing an apicalcircular rim).
11Inflorescence otherwise (if terminal, the flowers not arranged in heads), either of a solitary flower, or one of a wide variety of inflorescences with flowers attached at different points along branched or unbranched axes (e.g. axillary).
16 Leaves not glandular-punctate and aromatic (only herbaceousHypericum sometimes with black or transluscent leaf punctae, thus keyed instead in S1); flowers with 1-5 or 8-10 stamens; fruit not a berry, instead either a capsule (Hypericum), drupe (Cornus; Viburnum), follicle (APOCYNACEAE), or prominently ribbed and stipitate anthocarp (Pisonia).
17 Fruit prominently ribbed (an anthocarp), the ribs with stipitateglands, the fruit thus usually sticky (this persisting on herbarium specimens)
18 Fresh plants not exuding a white, milky latex (instead clear or not apparent); pistil 1 (or 2-5 in Hypericum); fruit various, but not of paired, linearfollicles (see below).
19 Flowers bright yellow; stamens many; leaves < 1.5 cm wide; fruit a capsule; leaves with pellucid or dark punctateglands (use at least 10× magnification)
14Inflorescence either terminal, axillary or leaf-opposed, if terminal elongate (not flat-topped) or flowers solitary; if axillary then variously arranged (sometimes also solitary in the axils).
23Ovarysuperior (flowers hypogynous); corolla primarily radially symmetrical (zygomorphic in Citharexylum in VERBENACEAE and MALPIGHIACEAE; absent in Forestiera in OLEACEAE); fruit either a 1-4-seeded drupe, or a many-seeded berry (or berry-like fruit), or a capsule.
27 Leaves with a conspicuous mix of silvery stellatehairs (upper) and rusty colored scales (lower); ovaries bearing rusty colored scales; flowers small, yellowish and inconspicuous; [nw. PA northward]
27 Leaves glabrous or nearly so, lacking a conspicuous mix of stellatehairs adaxially and rusty scales abaxially; ovaries not bearing rusty colored scales; flowers of various size and color.
28Stamens 8-10, of 2 different lengths in each flower; petals separate, 4-5 (-7), pink purple, 10-15 mm long; stems strongly arching, rooting at the tips; [plants of flooded to saturated wetlands]
28Stamens either (1-) 2 (-4), or 4-5, or 10, all of the same length; petals fused (separate in RHAMNACEAE and BUXACEAE, but then < 5 mm long and white or cream), white, bright-yellow, lilac, or pink; stems erect (or at least not arching and rooting at the tips); [plants of various habitats].
29Petals separate, 4-5, white or cream; stamens 4-5.
30Petals clawed (the bases much thinner than the broader tips); fruit a drupe; inflorescence a terminal raceme (Byrsonima) or axillarycorymbs or umbels (Malpighia); [in part, Byrsonima and Malpighia; some vining species will grow shrub-like, but those keyed in J3; TX and FL only in our area]
31 Fruit a loculicidal capsule, dehiscing into 3 valves; branches square in ×-section; leaves < 2 cm long; [exotic, cultivated and weakly established, of temperate areas]
29Petals fused (at least basally), 4-5, white, bright yellow, lilac, or pink; stamens either (1-) 2 (-4) or 10; fruit either a capsule or a 1-seeded drupe.