Characteristics
Angiosperms (Dicots)
Rhododendron colemanii R.F. Mill.
Red Hills Azalea; Colman's Azalea
Shrub
Perennial
Vascular
Red Hills Azalea is a native deciduous shrub in the Heath family (Ericaceae). This species was first described in 2008 from material collected in Monroe County, Alabama. It occurs on sandy ridges and banks of streams and on moist north-facing hardwood slopes in hardwood forests. Its range is confined to the Red Hills area of Alabama and a small area of adjacent west Georgia. Unlike most of our native deciduous azaleas, the Red Hills Azalea is a tetrapoid (having twice the normal number of chromosomes or 4N). It shares this trait with Rhododendron atlanticum, Rhododendron austrinum, Rhododendron calendulaceum, and the old world Rhododendron luteum. These species make up a monophyletic group, sharing a common ancestor unique only to them. The Red Hills Azalea is a multi-stemmed shrub reaching 20 feet in height. Leaves are deciduous, alternate, obovate to oblong in outline, with entire ciliate margins. The leaves are pubescent along the midvein on the upper surface with multicellular hairs. The lower surface is glabrous or pubescent with unicellular and scattered multicellular hairs. The midvein on the lower surface of the leaf is pubescent with appressed multicellular hairs. Flowers are produced in terminal racemes after the leaves are fully expanded. The pedicels of the flowers are densely covered with unicellular and multicellular glandular hairs. Flower color varies widely from white with a yellow blotch on the upper corolla lobe, to uniformly white, pink with yellow blotch, or uniformly pink, to rarely yellow. The outside of the flowers are covered with unicellular and multicellular gland-tipped hairs. The flowers are fragrant with a sweet, musky or lemony odor. The fruit is a cylindrical capsule with prominent raised warty bumps toward the tip, and sparsely to densely covered with unicellular and multicellular eglandular hairs, often with glandular-tipped multicellular hairs at the base. Although it is a recently described species, the Red Hills Azalea is widely
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Native
S1 (State Rank)
G? (Global Rank)
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Classification
Ericales
Rhododendron colemanii R.F. Mill. - Red Hills Azalea; Colman's Azalea
Citation
<a href=https://scholar.lib.vt.edu/ejournals/JARS/v62n2/v62n2-zhou.htm>Rhododendron colemanii R.F. Miller, J. Amer. Rhododendron Soc. 62(2): 72–78, figs. 1–5. 2008 [2009].</a>
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USA: ALABAMA: Monroe County, between Highway 41 and Big Flat Creek, 2 May 2007, R. F. Miller 24691 (holotype: TROY).
Species Distribution Map
Specimens and Distribution
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Range of years during which specimens were collected:
Plant Photos
Rhododendron colemanii - Alvin Diamond
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Rhododendron colemanii - Alvin Diamond
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Rhododendron colemanii - Alvin Diamond
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Rhododendron colemanii - Alvin Diamond
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