Florida Yew (Taxus floridana) |
Color Photograph: © by and courtesy of Roger Carter, Valdosta State University |
Florida Yew (Taxus floridana) Identifying Characters: The only yew species in Florida. Similar Species: See above. Measurements: A shrub or bushy tree about 18 feet tall and 1 foot in diameter. Seed Cones: Seeds about 0.25 inches long, elliptical, blunt-pointed, brown, and angulate; seed nearly completely enclosed by a red, cup-shaped receptacle about 0.4 inches in diameter; seed cones scattered and single on leafy twigs. Needles: Needles between 0.75 and 1 inch in length; color dark green above, pale below; needles with a distinct petiole. Bark: Bark dark purple-brown, smooth, sometimes separating into large, thin, irregular plates. Native Range: Florida Yew is a very rare species restricted to the river bluffs and ravines on the banks of the Apalachicola River in Panhandle region of Florida. Habitat: See above.
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