Stewartia malacodendron is uncommon and of conservation concern in some portions of its range. It is available through the horticultural trade. It is most easily distinguished from S. ovata by the petiole wings not enclosing the winter buds, much smaller bracts, different fruit shape, and lustrous seeds. Due to incorrectly identified herbarium specimens, some online databases show a much broader distribution for the species.
Cavanilla florida Salisbury and Stewartia nobilis Salisbury are illegitimate names that have been applied to this species.
Shrub to 6 m; lvs elliptic to obovate-oblong, 4-10 cm, acute or abruptly acuminate at both ends, obscurely serrulate, finely hairy beneath; fls subsessile, 6-9 cm wide; filaments purple; style thick, much shorter than the stamens, with a 5-lobed stigma; fr depressed- globose, 1.5 cm; seeds shining brown, plump, with angular (not thin or winged) margins; 2n=30. Moist woods on the coastal plain, seldom more inland; e. Va. to Fla. and La.
Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.