Clethra acuminata
Clethra acuminata, the mountain pepper bush, is a shrub native to the Appalachian Mountains of the southeastern United States. It has been reported from the states of Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee, primarily from deciduous forests at elevations of.
Clethra acuminata is a native plant to the lower 48 states of the United States. It is an understory shrub found in the Appalachian region of the eastern United States. Other common names of Clethra acuminata include cinnamon clethra, mountain sweetpepperbush, and mountain sweet pepperbush. Clethra acuminata is a distinct species due to its floral and vegetative morphology within the genus. While Clethra acuminata is sometimes misidentified as Clethra alnifolia, they are two distinct species, Clethra acuminata has longer leaves.
Description
Clethra acuminata can reach as high as tall. It has alternately arranged, acuminate leaves with fine teeth along the margins, long, glabrous above and slightly hairy or glabrous underneath. Clethra acuminata is a dicot perennial and a temperate deciduous shrub. The leaves are simple and crowded towards the ends of branches, and the bisexual flowers are typically white and bell-shaped and less than one inch in length. The flowers of Clethra acuminata grow in cone shaped racemes that vary from three to eight inches in length. The flowers are rich in nectar, which helps to support native pollinators. The flowers of C. acuminata bloom from the months of June to August. C. acuminata flowers are lost during winter and are replaced by brown capsule fruit. The seeds are typically eaten by birds and are displayed from September to October. The leaves of C. acuminata turn yellow and orange during the fall. As C. acuminata ages, the bark peels to show a cinnamon colored interior; this is where one of its common names, cinnamon clethra, originates. Clethra acuminata can grow from eight to twenty feet in height and four to six feet in width. Bark on older plants splits and peels in thin sheets, revealing cinnamon colored bark underneath. Inflorescences are racemes with bell-shaped white flowers.Clethra acumniata is commonly mistaken for Clethra alnifolia due to their similar appearances, the differences are many, but the most recognizable difference lies in their leaf shape Clethra acuminata has 8–20 cm long leaves that do not have deep serrations while Clethra alnifolia has 7–10 cm long leaves with deep serrations along the upper half of the leaf's edges. Clethra accuminata is also different from Clethra alnifolia at its pubescent stages and in the number of vascular suppliers to the sepals.