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Hydrangea Linnaeus. Hydrangea, Sevenbark.

Key to Hydrangea

A genus of about 45 species, shrubs and lianas, of e. North America and e. Asia. Molecular analyses have long suggested that Hydrangea as usually interpreted is polyphyletic (Soltis, Xiang, & Hufford 1995; Samain, Wanke, & Goetghebeur 2010; Yang et al. 2023) and should either be circumscribed more broadly to include other genera in tribe Hydrangeeae that are phylogenetically embedded (including, in our area, Decumaria), an approach that has been further developed and formalized by De Smet et al. (2015). Alternatively, Hydrangea s.l. could be separated into multiple, monophyletic segregate genera, an approach promoted by Ohba & Akiyama (2016). Yang et al. (2023) show the divergence of Hydrangea s.l. commencing in the late Oligocene (about 24 MYA), and a clade structure not conducive to recognition of traditional segregates. For now, we have followed the broad approach (with generic and sectional circumscriptions follow De Smet et al. 2015). If split along the lines of Ohba & Akiyama (2016), our species would potentially end up in 4 genera: Hydrangea s.s. (arborescens, cinerea, radiata, and quercifolia), Decumaria barbara, Heteromalla paniculata, and Hortensia macrophylla. See Dirr (2004) and van Gelderen & van Gelderen (2004) for information on cultivated hydrangeas.

Ref: Boufford & Wood (1977); De Smet et al. (2015); Dirr (2004); Freeman (2016b) In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (2016); Hufford (2004) In Kubitzki et al. (2004); McClintock (1957); McGregor (2016b) In Flora of North America Editorial Committee (2016); Ohba & Akiyama (2016); Pilatowski (1982); Samain, Wanke, & Goetghebeur (2010); Soltis, Xiang, & Hufford (1995); Yang et al. (2023a). Show full citations.

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image of plant© Alan Cressler: Hydrangea quercifolia, sterile flowers, Flat Shoal Creek, Harris County, Georgia 1 by Alan Cressler | Hydrangea quercifolia source | Original Image ⭷
image of plant© Gary P. Fleming | Hydrangea barbara | Original Image ⭷
image of plant© Alan Cressler: Decumaria barbara, Tallulah Gorge State Park, Rabun County, Georgia 1 by Alan Cressler | Hydrangea barbara source | Original Image ⭷
image of plant© Alan Cressler: Hydrangea radiata, Nantahala National Forest, Macon County, North Carolina 2 by Alan Cressler | Hydrangea radiata source | Original Image ⭷

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