'': This endangered species is native to the southeastern United States, and its demise is associated with habitat loss from extensive drainage of
wetlands for agriculture and forestry. Lauraceae flowers are
protogynous, often with a complex flowering system to prevent
inbreeding. The fruits are an important food source for birds, on which some
Palaeognathae are highly dependent. Other birds that rely heavily on the fruit for their diets include members of the families
Cotingidae,
Columbidae,
Trogonidae,
Turdidae, and
Ramphastidae, amongst others. Birds that are specialised frugivores tend to eat the whole fruit and regurgitate seeds intact, thereby releasing the seeds in favourable situations for germination (
ornithochory). Some other birds that swallow the fruit pass the seed intact through their guts.
Seed dispersal of various species in the family is also carried out by
monkeys,
arboreal rodents,
porcupines,
opossums, and
fishes.
Hydrochory occurs in
Caryodaphnopsis. The leaves of some species in the Lauraceae have
domatia in the axils of their
veins. The domatia are home to certain
mites. Other lauraceous species, members of the genus
Pleurothyrium in particular, have a
symbiotic relationship with ants that protect and defend the tree. Some
Ocotea species are also used as nesting sites by ants, which may live in leaf pockets or in hollowed-out stems. Defense mechanisms that occur among members of the Lauraceae include irritant or toxic sap or tissues that repel or poison many
herbivorous organisms. Trees of the family predominate in the world's
laurel forests and
cloud forests, which occur in tropical to mild temperate regions of both northern and southern hemispheres. Other members of the family however, occur pantropically in general lowland and
Afromontane forest, and in Africa for example there are species endemic to countries such as
Cameroon,
Sudan,
Tanzania,
Uganda and
Congo. Several
relict species in the Lauraceae occur in temperate areas of both hemispheres. Many botanical species in other families have similar foliage to the Lauraceae due to
convergent evolution, and forests of such plants are called
laurel forest. These plants are adapted to high rainfall and humidity, and have leaves with a generous layer of
wax, making them glossy in appearance, and a narrow, pointed-oval shape with a 'drip tip', which permits the leaves to shed water despite the humidity, allowing transpiration to continue. Scientific names similar to
Daphne (e.g.,
Daphnidium,
Daphniphyllum) or "laurel" (e.g.,
Laureliopsis,
Skimmia laureola) indicate other plant families that resemble Lauraceae. Some Lauraceae species have adapted to demanding conditions in semiarid climates, but they tend to depend on favorable
edaphic conditions, for example, perennial aquifers, periodic groundwater flows, or periodically flooded forests in sand that contains hardly any nutrients. Various species have adapted to swampy conditions by growing
pneumatophores, roots that grow upward, that project above the levels of periodic floods that drown competing plants which lack such adaptations.
Paleobotanists have suggested the family originated some 174±32 million years ago (Mya), while others do not believe they are older than the mid-
Cretaceous. Fossil flowers attributed to this family occur in
Cenomanian clays (mid-Cretaceous, 90–98 Mya) of the Eastern
United States (
Mauldinia mirabilis). Fossils of Lauraceae are common in the Tertiary strata of Europe and North America, but they virtually disappeared from central Europe in the Late
Miocene. Because of their unusual fragility, the pollens of Lauraceae do not keep well and have been found only in relatively recent strata. Deciduous members of the Lauraceae lose all of their leaves for part of the year depending on variations in rainfall. The leaf loss coincides with the
dry season in tropical, subtropical, and arid regions.
Laurel wilt disease, caused by the virulent fungal pathogen
Raffaelea lauricola, a native of
southern Asia, was found in the southeast United States in 2002. The fungus spreads between hosts via a wood-boring beetle,
Xyleborus glabratus, with which it has a
symbiotic relationship. Several Lauraceae species are affected. The beetle and disease are believed to have arrived in the US via infected solid wood packing material and have since spread to several states. ==Classification==