The following classification recognizes a single, inclusive genus
Cornus, with four subgroups and ten subgenera supported by molecular phylogeny. Geographical ranges as
native plants are given below.
Blue- or white-fruited dogwoods Paniculate or corymbose
cymes; bracts minute, nonmodified; fruits globose or subglobose, white, blue, or black: • '
Subgenus Yinquania'''''. Leaves opposite to subopposite; fall blooming. •
Cornus oblonga. East Asia from Pakistan through the Himalayas and China. •
Cornus peruviana. Costa Rica and Venezuela to Bolivia. • '
Subgenus Kraniopsis
.' Leaves opposite; summer blooming. •
Cornus alba (Siberian dogwood).
Siberia and northern China. •
Cornus amomum (silky dogwood). Eastern
U.S. east of the Great Plains except for the
Deep South. •
Cornus asperifolia (toughleaf dogwood). Southeastern U.S. •
Cornus austrosinensis (South China dogwood). East Asia. •
Cornus bretschneideri (Bretschneider's dogwood). Northern China. •
Cornus coreana (Korean dogwood). Northeast Asia. •
Cornus drummondii (roughleaf dogwood). U.S. between the
Appalachia and the
Great Plains, and southern
Ontario, Canada. •
Cornus excelsa. Mexico to Honduras. •
Cornus foemina (stiff dogwood) Southeastern and southern United States. •
Cornus glabrata (brown dogwood or smooth dogwood). Western
North America. •
Cornus hemsleyi (Hemsley's dogwood). Southwest China. •
Cornus koehneana (Koehne's dogwood). Southwest China. •
Cornus macrophylla (large-leafed dogwood; ). East Asia. •
Cornus obliqua (pale dogwood). Northeastern and central U.S., and southeastern Canada. •
Cornus paucinervis. China. •
Cornus racemosa (northern swamp dogwood or gray dogwood). Northeastern and central U.S., and extreme southeastern Canada. •
Cornus rugosa (round-leaf dogwood). Northeastern and north-central U.S., and southeastern Canada. •
Cornus sanguinea (common dogwood). Europe. •
Cornus sericea (red osier dogwood). Northern and western North America, except
Arctic regions. •
Cornus walteri (Walter's dogwood). Central China. •
Cornus wilsoniana (ghost dogwood). China. •
Cornus × arnoldiana (
Hybrid:
C. obliqua ×
C. racemosa). Eastern North America. • '
Subgenus Mesomora
.' Leaves alternate; summer blooming. •
Cornus alternifolia (pagoda dogwood or alternate-leaf dogwood). Eastern U.S. and southeastern Canada. •
Cornus controversa (table dogwood). East Asia.
Cornelian cherries Umbellate cymes; bracts modified, non-petaloid; fruits oblong, red; stone walls filled with cavities: • '
Subgenus Afrocrania
.' Dioecious, bracts 4. •
Cornus volkensii.
Afromontane eastern Africa. • '
Subgenus Cornus
.' Plants hermaphroditic, bracts 4 or 6 •
Cornus eydeana. Yunnan in China •
Cornus mas (European cornel or Cornelian-cherry).
Mediterranean. •
Cornus officinalis (Japanese cornel). China,
Japan,
Korea. •
Cornus piggae (
Late Paleocene, North Dakota) •
Cornus sessilis (blackfruit cornel).
California. • '
Subgenus Sinocornus
.' Plants hermaphroditic, bracts 4 or 6 •
Cornus chinensis (Chinese cornel).
China.
Big-bracted dogwoods Capitular cymes: • '
Subgenus Discocrania
.' Bracts 4, modified, non-petaloid; fruits oblong, red. •
Cornus disciflora. Mexico and Central America • '
Subgenus Cynoxylon
.' Bracts 4 or 6, large and petaloid, fruits oblong, red. •
Cornus florida (flowering dogwood). U.S. east of the Great Plains, north to southern Ontario. •
Cornus nuttallii (Pacific dogwood). Western North America, from
British Columbia to
California. • '
Subgenus Syncarpea
.' Bracts 4, large and petaloid, fruits red, fused into a compound multi-stoned berry. •
Cornus capitata (Himalayan flowering dogwood).
Himalaya. •
Cornus hongkongensis (Hong Kong dogwood). Southern China,
Laos,
Vietnam. •
Cornus kousa (Kousa dogwood). Japan and (as subsp.
chinensis) central and northern China. •
Cornus multinervosa. Yunnan and Sichuan provinces of China
Dwarf dogwoods Minute corymbose cymes; bracts 4, petaloid; fruit globose, red; rhizomatous herb: • '
Subgenus Arctocrania
.' •
Cornus canadensis (Canadian dwarf cornel or bunchberry) Northern North America, southward in the
Appalachian and
Rocky Mountains. •
Cornus suecica (Eurasian dwarf cornel or bunchberry). Northern Eurasia, locally in extreme northeast and northwest North America. •
Cornus × unalaschkensis (
Hybrid:
C. canadensis ×
C. suecica).
Aleutian Islands (
Alaska),
Greenland, and
Labrador and
Newfoundland in Canada. •
Cornus wardiana (Evergreen dwarf cornel or bunchberry). Northern
Myanmar.
Incertae sedis (unplaced) •
Cornus clarnensis (Middle
Eocene, Central Oregon)
Horticultural hybrids Cornus ×
rutgersensis (
Hybrid:
C. florida ×
C. kousa). Horticulturally developed. ==Cultural references==