21 results for family: Annonaceae.
Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Annonaceae | Annona | Pond-apple | | | 
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Annonaceae | Annona glabra | Pond-apple | Swamps, wet hammocks, other seasonally ponded wetlands, sloughs and strands. | C. and s. FL; Mexico, Central America, and South America; West Indies. | 
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Annonaceae | Annona montana | Mountain Soursop | Disturbed forest. | Native of West Indies, Central America, and South America. Present in Broward County, FL (J. Lange, pers.comm., 2024). | |
Annonaceae | Annona squamosa | Sugar-apple; Sweetsop | Disturbed uplands, shell mounds, usually near habitations. | Native of tropical America. | 
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Annonaceae | Annonaceae | Custard-apple Family | | | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina | Pawpaw | | | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina angustifolia | Slimleaf Pawpaw | Dry pinelands, dry maritime forests. | Se. GA south to n. peninsular FL (Levy, Alachua, and Putnam counties), west to about the Suwannee River in the e. Panhandle of FL; disjunct northwards in Charleston County, SC, where reported by McMillan & Porcher (2005) as A. longifolia var. spatulata and by Gramling (2010) as A. angustifolia. | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina incana | Woolly Pawpaw, Flag Pawpaw, Polecat Bush | Dry pinelands. | E. GA south to c. peninsular FL. | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina manasota | Manasota Pawpaw | Longleaf pine sandhills and dry pine flatwoods. | Endemic to wc. Panhandle FL (Manatee, Sarasota, and Hardee counties). | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina obovata | Biglower Pawpaw | Scrub, sandhills, open dry hammocks. | FL peninsula (Glades County north to Clay County). | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina parviflora | Small-flowered Pawpaw, Small-fruited Pawpaw | Sandy or rocky, dry to fairly moist forests. | Se. VA south to c. peninsular FL, west to se. TX, primarily on the Coastal Plain, but inland to w. NC, nw. SC, n. GA, n. AL, n. MS, and s. AR. | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina pygmaea | Dwarf Pawpaw, Gopherberry | Pine flatwoods, wet savannas. | Se. GA south to s. peninsular FL (Collier County). | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina reticulata | Netleaf Pawpaw | Wet pine flatwoods, pine savannas, longleaf pine sandhills, dry flatwoods, wiregrass prairies, and low scrub. Also persisting in scraped, grazed, or otherwise disturbed scrubby pine flatwoods and prairies. | S. GA south to s. peninsular FL. | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina spatulata | Slimleaf Pawpaw | Dry pinelands. | E. GA south to n. FL (west of the Suwanee River), west to Panhandle FL and s. AL. | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina tetramera | Fourpetal Pawpaw | Florida scrub. | Endemic to se. peninsular FL (Martin and Palm Beach counties) | 
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Annonaceae | Asimina triloba | Common Pawpaw, Indian-banana | Alluvial forests, other moist, nutrient-rich forests. | NJ, w. NY, and s. ON west to s. MI and e. NE, south to Panhandle FL, s. LA, and ne. TX. The modern distribution may reflect some human movement of the species, especially northwards into formerly glaciated areas, and also peripherally; "collectively, the genetic data suggest that long-distance dispersal played an important role in the distribution of pawpaw and is consistent with the hypothesized role of indigenous peoples" (Wyatt, Hamrick, & Trapnell 2021). | 
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Annonaceae | Deeringothamnus | Dwarf Pawpaw, Deering's Pawpaw, Squirrel-banana | | | 
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Annonaceae | Deeringothamnus pulchellus | White Squirrel-banana, Pretty Pawpaw | Pine flatwoods. | Endemic to c. and southern peninsular FL (Charlotte, Lee, and Orange counties). | 
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Annonaceae | Deeringothamnus rugelii | Yellow Squirrel-banana, Rugel’s Pawpaw | Wet pine flatwoods. | Endemic to Volusia County, FL. | 
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Annonaceae | Polyalthia | | | | 
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Annonaceae | Polyalthia suberosa | Corky Debbar Tree | Rockland hammocks, very rarely established from cultivation. | Native of se. and s. Asia. | 
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