|                    Cinnamon bark, Pepper cinnamon
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                |                    Canella winterana  
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                |                    Canellaceae 
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                 Landscape Uses:
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                 Accent or specimen shrub or small tree in coastal areas. | 
               
                Ecological Restoration Notes:  | 
               
              
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                 A relatively common sub-canopy tree in coastal hammocks in the Florida Keys and the shores of Florida Bay. | 
               
              
                | Availability: | 
               
              
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                 Commonly available at native plant nurseries in central and South Florida.  | 
               
              
                | Description: | 
               
              
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                 Small tree or large shrub with a broadly rounded crown.  Trunks to 10 inches in diameter, but usually much smaller.  Bark light gray, broken into short, thick scales.  Leaves dark green above, shiny, 2-5 inches long, aromatic when crushed. | 
               
              
                | Height: | 
               
              
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                 Typically 15-20 feet in height; to 29 feet in South Florida.  Usually taller than broad. | 
               
              
                | Growth Rate: | 
               
              
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                 Slow. | 
               
              
                | Range: | 
               
              
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                 Monroe, Miami-Dade and Collier counties; West Indies, Mexico and the Bay Islands of Honduras.  Very rare on the mainland along the extreme southern coast to about Everglades City. For a digitized image of Elbert Little's Florida range map, visit the  Exploring Florida website. | 
               
              
                | Habitats: | 
               
              
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                 Coastal hammocks. | 
               
              
                | Soils: | 
               
              
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                 Moist, well-drained limestone or calcareous sandy soils, with humusy top layer. | 
               
              
                | Nutritional Requirements: | 
               
              
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                 Moderate; can grow in nutrient poor soils, but needs some organic content to thrive. | 
               
              
                | Salt Water Tolerance: | 
               
              
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                 Moderate; tolerates brackish water or occasional inundation by salt water. | 
               
              
                | Salt Wind Tolerance: | 
               
              
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                 Moderate; grows near salt water, but is protected from direct salt spray by other vegetation. | 
               
              
                | Drought Tolerance: | 
               
              
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                 Moderate; generally requires moist soils, but tolerant of short periods of drought once established. | 
               
              
                | Light Requirements: | 
               
              
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                 Full sun to light shade. | 
               
              
                | Flower Color: | 
               
              
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                 Red petals with yellow anthers. | 
               
              
                | Flower Characteristics: | 
               
              
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                 Semi-showy clusters with green and purple buds and red flowers. | 
               
              
                | Flowering Season: | 
               
              
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                 All year; peak spring-summer. | 
               
              
                | Fruit: | 
               
              
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                 Red berry. | 
               
              
                | Wildlife and Ecology: | 
               
              
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                 Provides food and cover for wildlife.  Nectar plant for Schaus' swallowtail (Heraclides aristodemius) and other butterflies. | 
               
                     
                | Horticultural Notes: | 
               
              
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                 Can be grown from seed. | 
               
              
                | Comments: | 
               
              
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                 The crushed leaves have a spicy fragrance.  In the 1700s, the inner bark was exported from the West Indies to Europe as a substitute for cinnamon.  The outer bark is toxic.  It is listed as endangered by the state of Florida. See also the Florida Wildflower Foundation's  Flower Friday page. | 
               
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                    George D. Gann in habitat, Dominican Republic, 2011
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