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Atlantic St. John's Wort, Hypericum tenuifolium Synonym: Hypericum reductum

Debbie Miller, Mack Thetford, Christina Verlinde, and Gabriel Campbell

Note: This fact sheet is also available as a chapter in a comprehensive manual titled Dune Restoration and Enhancement for the Florida Panhandle, available in pdf form here: https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/pdffiles/SG/SG15600.pdf. Please see the manual for more information about other useful and attractive native plants for dunes and for further information about restoration and preservation techniques.

Hypericaceae

 

Figure 1. 
Figure 1. 
Credit: Gabriel Campbell, UF/IFAS

 

Atlantic St. John's wort occurs throughout Florida and more broadly west to Alabama and northeast to North Carolina on beach dunes and scrub plant communities frequently associated with wet depression areas. Hypericum is a large genus of plants with 31 species in Florida alone (Wunderlin et al. 2017). This plant is a prolific flower producer that attracts numerous pollinators

General Description

Atlantic St. John's wort is a semi-woody to herbaceous perennial subshrub with a decumbent growth habit; forming a small rounded shrub to a low mat that rarely reaches above 1.5 ft. Leaves are simple, opposite, and needlelike. Stems are often decumbent and matted and are 6-angled in cross-section when young. Flowers have 5 persistent sepals, 5 yellow petals, and bear numerous stamens. They are 0.4 to 01.8 in wide, are axillary and terminal, are solitary or grow in small clusters called cymules or dichasia, and flower from June to September. Fruits are capsules 6 to 10 mm long and turn brown when ripe.

 

Figure 2. 
Figure 2. 
Credit: Mack Thetford, UF/IFAS

 

Propagation

Atlantic St. John's wort can be propagated from stem cuttings. The following is adopted from Thetford and Miller (2004). Collect 4-in terminal stem cuttings during the growing season. Remove leaves of bottom ½ in of cutting and quick dip in auxin [NAA (1-Naphthaleneacetic acid) 500 to 1000 ppm, or IBA (Indole-3-butyric acid) 1000 to 5000 ppm, or Dip 'N Grow] for 1 second (Thetford and Miller 2002). Root cuttings in 72-cell flats with a well-drained substrate under intermittent mist and natural photoperiod. Roots initiate within 2 to 3 weeks. By week 4, rooted cuttings may be removed from mist, and by week 6, transplants can be moved into larger pots (4-in, 1-qt or 1-gal). Rooted cuttings benefit from fertigation with a complete fertilizer solution providing nitrogen at a rate of 150 ppm 1 to 2 times a week before transplanting to larger containers. An additional 4 to 6 weeks of outdoor production with supplemental irrigation is required to develop a full rootball.

No published information on germination requirements of Hypericum tenuifolium is available. Germination requirements for the related species, H. perforatum are variable across populations but need light to germinate with constant (15 and 25°C) or fluctuating (25/15°C) day/night temperatures and are non-dormant (Pérez-García et al. 2006). Light has been reported as necessary for germination of other Hypericum sp. with similar optimal germination temperatures, but physiological or physical dormancies have also been reported (Çirak et al. 2007; Çirak 2007.)

Outplanting

No published information on outplanting information is presently available for Atlantic St. John's wort. The authors have successfully transplanted this species in home landscape situations with minimal supplemental irrigation. In Florida, H. tenuifolium is considered a facultative wetland species (occurs in wetlands 67% to 99% in the wild) (Wunderlin et al. 2017) and in coastal communities this species is associated with coastal interdunal swales and adjacent low ridges.

Literature Cited

Campbell, M.H. 1985. "Germination, emergence and seedling growth of Hypericum perforatum L." Weed Research 25(4):259–266.

Çirak C., K. Kevseroglu, and A.K. Ayan. 2007. "Break seed dormancy in a Turkish endemic Hypericum species: Hypericum aviculariifolium subsp. depilatum var. depilatum by light and some pre-soaking treatments." Journal of Arid Environments 68(1):159–164.

Çirak, C. 2007. "Seed germination protocols for Ex situ conservation of some Hypericum species from Turkey." American Journal of Plant Physiology 2(5):287–294.

Pérez-García, F., M. Huertas, E. Mora, B. Peña, F. Varela, and M.E. González-Benito. 2006. "Hypericum perforatum L. seed germination: interpopulation variation and effect of light, temperature, presowing treatments and seed desiccation." Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 53:1187–1198.

Thetford, M., and D.L. Miller. 2002. "Propagation of 4 Florida coastal dune species." Native Plants Journal 3(2):112–120.

Thetford, M., and D.L. Miller. 2004. Propagation and Production of Atlantic St. John's Wort. ENH972. Gainesville: University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/ep229

Wunderlin, R.P., B.F. Hansen, A.R. Franck, and F.B. Essig. 2017. Atlas of Florida Plants. [S. M. Landry and K. N. Campbell (application development), USF Water Institute.] Institute for Systematic Botany, University of South Florida, Tampa. http://florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/

Publication #SGEB-75-9

Release Date:October 4, 2018

Reviewed At:October 6, 2021

Program Material

About this Publication

This document is SGEB-75-9, one of a series of the Florida Sea Grant College Program, UF/IFAS Extension. Original publication date September 2018. Visit the EDIS website at https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu.

About the Authors

Debbie Miller, professor, Wildlife Ecology and Conservation Department, UF/IFAS West Florida Research and Education Center, Milton, FL 32583; and Mack Thetford, associate professor, Environmental Horticulture Department, UF/IFAS West Florida Research and Education Center, Milton, FL 32583. Christina Verlinde, UF/IFAS Extension Florida Sea Grant agent Santa Rosa County. Gabriel Campbell, graduate research assistant; and Ashlynn Smith, graduate research assistant; UF/IFAS West Florida Research and Education Center, Milton, FL 32583.

Contacts

  • Deborah Miller
  • Mack Thetford