Zenobia pulverulenta (Bartram ex Willdenow) Pollard. Common name: Zenobia, Honey-cups. Phenology: Apr-Jun; Sep-Oct. Habitat: Pocosins, margins of pineland ponds. Distribution: This monotypic genus is a narrow endemic of the Coastal Plain of se. VA, NC, SC, and e. GA (Bryan Co.).
ID notes: The crenate leaves help distinguish Zenobia from other pocosin shrubs.
Origin/Endemic status: Endemic
Taxonomy Comments: Zenobia was considered by Wood (1961) to have "no close relatives," but molecular phylogeny suggests that it is sister to Andromeda. The species is remarkably variable in leaf glaucescence. Many plants in the fall-line sandhills and upper Coastal Plain have the lower leaf surface, pedicels, and capsules covered in wax to the point that they are bright white; outer Coastal Plain plants generally lack any glaucescence. The recognition of two species (see synonymy) was based largely on this character; further study appears warranted.
Other Comments: The flowers are extremely fragrant. In the centers of major peat domes in the Outer Coastal Plain and in large Carolina bays in the Bladen Lakes region, where peat depths reach 3-5 meters, occur areas of up to 25 square kilometers dominated by Zenobia (sometimes codominant with Chamaedaphne or Sarracenia flava). This community has been referred to as "deciduous low pocosin," to distinguish it from the dominance of evergreen shrubs found in most pocosins.
Synonymy ⓘ: = C, F, FNA8, G, GW2, K4, RAB, Va, Luteyn et al (1996); > Zenobia cassinefolia (Vent.) Pollard — S; > Zenobia cassinifolia (Vent.) Pollard — S13; > Zenobia pulverulenta (Bartram ex Willd.) Pollard — S, S13. Basionym: Andromeda pulverulenta W.Bartram 1799
Links to other floras: = Zenobia pulverulenta - FNA8
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Wetland Indicator Status:
- Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain: OBL
Heliophily ⓘ: 3
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© Gary P. Fleming | Original Image ⭷
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© Bruce A. Sorrie | Original Image ⭷
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© Scott Ward | Original Image ⭷
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© Bruce A. Sorrie | Original Image ⭷
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© Shaun Pogacnik, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Shaun Pogacnik source CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG | Original Image ⭷
© Gary P. Fleming | Original Image ⭷
© Bruce Sorrie | Original Image ⭷
© Scott Ward | Original Image ⭷
© Milo Pyne, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Milo Pyne source CC-BY-NC, permission granted to NCBG | Original Image ⭷
© Scott Ward | Original Image ⭷Feedback
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Horticultural Information
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Height: 4-6 ft.
plant sale text: Honeycup is famous for its striking glaucous (covered with a whitish waxy bloom), blue-green foliage and incredible fall color. With a mixture of reds and oranges that strive to hang on as long as they can through the winter. This southeastern native's range is small: Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia. Native to the coastal plains in bogs and among low thickets of evergreen shrubs, this wonderful shrub is easy to grow in sun and even tolerant of heat and some drought, although it likes moist soils. The pendant white, wide open flowers of the honeycup bloom on old wood, and have a light citrus-like scent.
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native range: VA, NC, SC & GA
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