25 results for family: Berberidaceae.
Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Berberidaceae | Alloberberis | | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Alloberberis swaseyi | Texas Barberry | Dry woodlands on limestone. | Edwards Plateau, in the border zone of our region in Travis, Hays, Comal, & Bexar counties, TX. | |
Berberidaceae | Alloberberis trifoliolata | Algerito, Agarito, Currant-of-Texas, Chaparral-berry | Rocky limestone soils. | S. TX, nc. TX, s. NM, and s. AZ south to Mexico (CHH, COA, DUR, HID, JAL, NLE, SLP, SON, TAM, ZAC). | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberidaceae | Barberry Family | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberis | Barberry | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberis ×ottawensis | | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberis canadensis | American Barberry, Allegheny Barberry | Rocky woods, forest openings, glades, usually over mafic rocks (such as diabase) or calcareous rocks (such as limestone), sometimes along fence-rows in sw. VA (presumably spread by birds). | A broad Southern Appalachian-Ozarkian endemic, not occurring in Canada (the epithet a misnomer): scattered and local in VA, WV, KY, TN, NC, SC, AL, GA, MO, IL, IN, and sc. PA (where apparently now extirpated). | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberis julianae | Evergreen Barberry, Juliana's Barberry | Floodplains, also seeding down and escaping locally near horticultural plantings. | Native of China. First reported for NC by Pittillo & Brown (1988). | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberis thunbergii | Japanese Barberry | Rich forests, old fields. | Native of Japan. This species is immune to wheat rust; it is now the most commonly encountered barberry in much of our area. | 
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Berberidaceae | Berberis vulgaris | European Barberry, Common Barberry | Disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. This species, once widely cultivated and established in North America, serves as an alternate host to wheat rust and has been subjected to eradication programs for over half a century. | 
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Berberidaceae | Caulophyllum | Blue Cohosh | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Caulophyllum giganteum | Northern Blue Cohosh | Rich moist forests. | C. giganteum is more northern in distribution than C. thalictroides, ranging from QC and ON south to w. NC, e. TN, c. KY, n. OH, and MI. | 
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Berberidaceae | Caulophyllum thalictroides | Common Blue Cohosh, Green Vivian | Rich forests. | NS, QC, ON, and MB, south to GA, AL, AR, and OK. | 
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Berberidaceae | Diphylleia | Umbrella-leaf | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Diphylleia cymosa | Umbrella-leaf, Pixie-parasol | Seepages and brookbanks, sometimes away from brooks or seeps in northern hardwood or cove hardwood forests (but then usually in subterranean seepage), primarily at moderate to high elevations. | A narrow Southern Appalachian endemic: high mountains of w. NC and e. TN, extending a short distance into ne. GA, nw. SC, and sw. VA. | 
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Berberidaceae | Jeffersonia | Twinleaf | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Jeffersonia diphylla | Twinleaf | Moist and extremely nutrient-rich forests, generally over calcareous or mafic rocks (including limestone, dolostone, amphibolite, greenstone, etc.) or very rich alluvium. | The species is widespread in ne. United States, south to MD, NC, and AL. | 
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Berberidaceae | Mahonia | Mahonia, Oregon-grape | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Mahonia aquifolium | Holly-leaf Oregon-grape | Suburban areas, persistent or weakly spreading from horticultural use. | Native of w. North America. | 
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Berberidaceae | Mahonia bealei | Leatherleaf Mahonia, Chinese Mahonia, Holly-grape | In deciduous forests in suburban areas, spread from plantings, not naturalized and invasive. | Native of China. Naturalizing widely (and increasingly aggressively) in the southeastern United States. Radford, Ahles, & Bell (1968) reported it as "a rare escape, Orange County, N.C."; this invasive is now in most counties across large parts of the southeastern United States, and expected to continue to spread and increase in abundance. | 
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Berberidaceae | Mahonia repens | Creeping Oregon-grape | Suburban woodlands (in our region). | Native of w. North America. | 
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Berberidaceae | Nandina | Nandina, Sacred-bamboo | | | |
Berberidaceae | Nandina domestica | Nandina, Sacred-bamboo | Forests and woodlands in suburban areas, commonly planted, increasingly escaping and naturalizing. | Native of China. Nandina has numerous cultivated forms, and is widely planted, especially southward. | 
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Berberidaceae | Podophyllum | May-apple | | | 
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Berberidaceae | Podophyllum peltatum | May-apple, American Mandrake, Wild Jalap | Rich forests, bottomlands, slopes, pastures. | NS west to MN, south to Panhandle FL and TX. | 
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