Cliffortia species are mostly upright shrubs, but some species develop into small trees of up to 5 m (16 ft) high, are more or less
herbaceous groundcover or grow in a dense tangle. The
stipules have merged with the base of the leaf and form a sheath around the branch. The leaves are
alternately arranged along the stems, and may consist of three, two or only one
leaflet with one or several main veins, seated or on a
leaf stalk. Leaflets may be thin or leathery, broad to needle-shaped, with the margin serrated or entire, and may have a spiny tip.
Cliffortia has separate male and female flowers in the
leaf axils, which are mostly set individually but sometimes in clusters. Some species have both male and female flowers on the same plant (and are
monoecious), while other species have plants of separate gender (or are
dioecious). The flowers never have
petals, which in other plant species predominantly function to attract pollinators, but that function is of cause unnecessary in wind-pollinated taxa, such as in the entire genus
Cliffortia.
3-merous flowers almost certainly represent the ancestral state, and it has been suggested that 4-merous flowers have arisen at four independent occasions. Trimerous flowers have three
sepals of variable size, and in male flowers six to many
stamens. Tetramerous flowers have four sepals of 5 mm long at most and either four or eight stamens. In female flowers the sepals are united at their base to form a calyx tube, and have one or two styles, that are finely divided like an ostridge feather. One or two
achenes may develop in each flower, within the inflating calyx. == Taxonomy ==