149 results for Family: Convolvulaceae.
| Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
| Convolvulaceae | Aniseia | Whitejacket | | | |
| Convolvulaceae | Aniseia martinicensis var. nitens | Whitejacket | Disturbed areas. | Native of tropical America (West Indies, Mexico, Central America, and South America). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Bonamia | Bonamia | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Bonamia grandiflora | Florida Bonamia, Florida Lady’s Nightcap | Florida scrub. | Endemic to c. peninsular FL, north to Marion County. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Camonea | | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Camonea umbellata | Hogvine | Disturbed areas. | Native of Africa and Asia. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulaceae | Morning Glory Family | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus | Field-bindweed | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus americanus | Northeastern Bindweed | Openings, woodland edges, brackish shores, salt marshes. | NL and ON south to e. NC and IL; Africa, South America, and the Atlantic Islands (Azores, Tristan da Cunha). The distribution is poorly understood. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus appalachianus | Appalachian Bindweed | Woodland edges, disturbed areas. | NB, NY, MI, and MN south to NC and KY. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus arvensis | Field Bindweed, Creeping Jenny, Possession-vine, Cornbind | Fields, roadsides, gardens, disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus binghamiae | Coastal Plain Bindweed | Marshes, woodland edges. | E. NC south to s. FL, west to e. TX; NM, NV, and CA south to Mexico; Peru. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus carrii | Carr's Bindweed | In deep sands. | Endemic to s. TX (Brooks and Hidalgo counties, TX). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus catesbyanus | Catesby's Bindweed | Longleaf pine savannas, marsh edges, openings in dry to dry-mesic montane forests. | VA, WV, and IN south to GA, FL Panhandle, and MS. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus equitans var. equitans | Texas Bindweed, Gray Bindweed, Silver Bindweed | Prairies, especially in rocky or sandy soils, eastwards in disturbed areas. | Native of sw. United States and nw. Mexico. Sw. AR, KS, CO, UT, and NV south to e. TX, s. TX, NM, AZ, and Mexico. Recorded for s. AL by C. Mohr in 1883; probably a ballast waif and not established. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus equitans var. lindheimeri | Texas Bindweed, Gray Bindweed, Silver Bindweed | Prairies, especially in rocky or sandy soils. | Native of c. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus erraticus | Occluded Bindweed | Swamps, disturbed areas. | QC and ON south to NJ, PA, IN, and IL. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus fraterniflorus | | Thickets, roadsides, fields, streambanks, disturbed areas. | MA and VT west to MI, IA, and KS, south to SC, GA, AL, AR, and OK. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus macounii | | Grasslands and woodlands. | MB west to AB, south through the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains to MO, OK, TX, NM, AZ. Reported for NC and VA; Brummitt (pers. comm.) says this species does not occur east of the Mississippi River. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus neoangulatus | Northwestern Bindweed | Riverbanks, wet-mesic prairies, hedges, roadsides, edges. | NB to BC, south to MD, IN, IL, MO, NE, CO, NM, and OR. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus neopubescens | Japanese Bindweed | Disturbed areas, persistent or spreading from horticultural use. | Native of e. Asia. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus purshianus | Shale Bindweed | Shale barrens and woodlands, less typically on limestone. | C. PA south through w. VA and e. WV to NC. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus sepium | European Bindweed | Disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus sericatus | Silky Bindweed, Blue Ridge Bindweed | Openings in dry to dry-mesic montane forests. | W. NC south through sw. SC to n. GA. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus soldanella | Shore Bindweed, Seaside Bindweed | Beaches, dunes. | This species is widely distributed around the world on beaches and coastal dunes. The NC and VA occurrences have usually been considered to represent introductions, presumably from Europe, but are also plausibly native, as the species has a wide distribution on beaches on many continents and is dispersed by seawater. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus spithamaeus | Low Bindweed | Dry limestone areas or on dry, rich shales. Ridges, taluses, and dry openings. | ME west to MN, south to VA, TN, and MO. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Convolvulus wallichianus | | Disturbed areas, also persistent from horticultural use. | Native of Asia. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cressa | Alkali-weed | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cressa nudicaulis | Leafless Cressa | Saline or alkali flats. | Coastal se. and s. TX and adjacent TAM; Argentina. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cressa truxillensis | Spreading Alkali-weed | Alkaline lakes and ponds. | OK, se. TX, c., UT, and sc. OR south through Mexico and Central America to South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta | Dodder | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta americana | American Dodder | Hammocks, pine flatwoods, disturbed areas, mainly on woody hosts. | C. and s. peninsular FL; West Indies; Mexico, Central America, and South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta campestris | Field Dodder, Prairie Dodder | Roadsides, fields, open disturbed areas, especially (but not only) on herbaceous Fabaceae. Other hosts include Acanthaceae, Asteraceae, Brassicaceae, Chenopodiaceae, Convolvulaceae, Euphorbiaceae, Hydrophyllaceae, Polygonaceae, Solanaceae, Uerticaceae, and Verbenaceae (Costea & Tardif 2006). | Nearly cosmopolitan because of its common association with cultivated legumes, its original distribution unclear. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta cassytoides | African Dodder | On Quercus phellos. | Native of s. Africa. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta cephalanthi | Buttonbush Dodder | Primarily on woody hosts. | NB west to BC, south to GA, TX, CA, and Mexico (but not cited in Villaseñor 2016). See Nelson (1993) for the first SC record. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta compacta | Compact Dodder | Bottomland forests, stream banks, marshes, swamps, pine savannas, calcareous seeps and streambanks, wet fields, other wet habitats, on herbaceous and especially on woody hosts. | VT, QC, and NE south to s. FL and TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta coryli | Hazel Dodder | Open woodlands and woodland borders, on a wide variety of woody and herbaceous hosts. | MA, NY, and SK south to SC, AL, TX, and AZ. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta cuspidata | Cusp Dodder | Bottomland forests and fields, especially on Asteraceae. | IN, ND, and UT south to KY, MS, TX, and NM. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta epilinum | Flax Dodder | Primarily on Linum. | Native of Europe. South to NJ, DE, PA, and n. OH (Kartesz 2022). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta epithymum ssp. epithymum | Clover Dodder | Primarily on Trifolium and Medicago. | Native of Europe. Also known from scattered localities in PA (Rhoads & Klein 1993); reported for VA by Kartesz (1999), based on Massey (1961). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta exaltata | Tall Dodder | Dry hammocks (FL), dry woodlands (TX), parasitic on woody hosts (Quercus, Ulmus, Diospyros, Vitis, Rhus, etc.) | N. peninsular FL (St. Johns, Putnam, and Levy counties) south to s. FL; TX southward (but not cited in Villaseñor 2016). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta glabrior | Engelmann's Dodder, Bushclover Dodder | On a wide range of herbaceous hosts. | E. and w. OK south to sw. LA, s. TX, NM, and n. Mexico. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta glomerata | Rope Dodder | Floodplains and other moist forests and thickets, primarily on Asteraceae. | OH, MI, MN, and ND south to KY, TN, MS, and TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta gronovii var. calyptrata | | Bottomlands and wet areas. | AR south to LA and TX; Europe. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta gronovii var. curta | | Wetlands. | ON west to AB, south to se. KS, NM, and AZ. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta gronovii var. gronovii | Swamp Dodder, Common Dodder | Stream banks, bottomland forests, bogs, marshes, swamps, wet fields, wet disturbed areas, on a very wide variety of herbaceous and woody plants. | QC west to BC, south to s. FL and AZ. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta harperi | Harper's Dodder | Outcrops of granite (Piedmont), sandstone (Cumberland Plateau, Ridge and Valley), and Altamaha grit (Coastal Plain), typically on plants such as Liatris microcephala, Bigelowia nuttallii, Hypericum gentianoides, Helianthus longifolius, and Croton willdenowii. | Ec. and wc. GA west to ne. and nw. AL. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta indecora var. attenuata | Bigseed Alfalfa Dodder, Pretty Dodder | Salt marshes (on Iva frutescens), pine savannas, bogs, roadsides, disturbed areas. | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta indecora var. indecora | | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta indecora var. longisepala | Bigseed Alfalfa Dodder, Pretty Dodder | Salt marshes (on Iva frutescens), pine savannahs, bogs, roadsides, disturbed areas. | NJ, MN, and ID, south to s. FL, TX, CA, Mexico, Central America, and South America. See Nelson (1993) for the first SC record. Silberhorn (1998) described an occurrence of this species in VA. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta japonica var. formosana | | Known to parasitize Citrus, Hedera, Lagerstroemia, Ligustrum, Malus, Nerium, Prunus, Quercus, Vitis, and other woody plants (Costea & Nesom 2023). | Native of e. Asia. Known as an introduction (in our region) in TX. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta japonica var. japonica | | Parasitizing herbaceous and woody hosts. | Native of e. Asia. Known in our region from AL (?), FL, MO (Aaron 2024), NJ, and TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta leptantha | Slender Dodder, Spurge Dodder | Parasitic on Euphorbia subg. Chamaesyce. | S. TX, c. TX, and NM south to Mexico (BCN, BCS, SIN, SON). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta obtusiflora var. glandulosa | Glandular Dodder | In calcareous glades, swampy thickets, and other habitats. Remarkably growing submersed and parasitic on Hygrophila polysperma (Williams, Tippery, & Les 2022). Usually parasitic on Persicaria, but also known from Alternanthera, Dalea, Hygrophila, Justicia, Ludwigia, Lythrum, and Xanthium. | GA and OK south to FL, TX, Mexico; West Indies. See Anderson (2007) for FL Panhandle record and Floden & Brant (2018) for the MO records. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta pentagona | Five-angled Dodder | Roadsides, fields, open disturbed areas, on a wide variety of (mostly herbaceous) hosts, especially Fabaceae. | MA, NY, MI, MN, MB, and MT south to FL, TX, and Mexico. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta polygonorum | Smartweed Dodder | On Persicaria and other hosts. | NY and ON west to ND, south to FL and TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta rostrata | Appalachian Dodder, Beaked Dodder | High elevation hardwood forests and thickets, especially on Asteraceae (Rudbeckia, Solidago, Symphyotrichum, Eurybia, Eupatorium), but also reported on Collinsonia canadensis, Diervilla, Hydrangea arborescens, Impatiens, Laportea, Rubus, Salix, Urtica, and Symphoricarpos. | A Southern Appalachian endemic: WV and MD south through w. VA, e. KY, e. TN, w. NC to n. GA. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta runyonii | Runyon's Dodder | On Asteraceae and other hosts. | Apparently endemic to the Rio Grande Plains of s. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta saururi | | Streambanks, wet meadows, bottomland forests, usually on Acalypha, Bidens, Boehmeria, Decodon, Cephalanthus, Impatiens, Penthorum, Persicaria, Salix, Saururus, Sium, and Solidago. | QC west to ON, south to NC, AR, and TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta squamata | Scale-flower Dodder | Usually parasitic on Asteraceae. | TX and NM south into Mexico (CHH, COA, DUR). | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta suaveolens | Fringed Dodder, Lucerne Dodder, Alfalfa Dodder | Fields, especially on herbaceous Fabaceae. | Native of South America. Reported from scattered sites in eastern North America, allegedly including AL, MD, and OH. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Cuscuta umbellata var. umbellata | Flat-globe Dodder | Beach dunes and coastal strands, especially on herbaceous hosts. Known hosts include Acleisanthes, Allionia, Alternanthera, Amaranthus, Atriplex, Boerhavia, Gilia, Iresine, Kallstroemia, Salsola, Sesuvium, Suaeda, Tidestromia, Trianthema, and Tribulus (Costea & Nesom (2023). | Peninsular FL; West Indies; KS and CO south through sw. LA, TX, NM, AZ, and Mexico; South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Dichondra | Ponyfoot, Dichondra | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Dichondra carolinensis | Carolina Ponyfoot | Lawns, roadsides, moist pinelands, mesic hammocks, floodplain forests. | Se. VA south to s. FL, west to AR and TX; also in Bermuda and reported for the Bahamas; sometimes adventive beyond that range. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Dichondra micrantha | Kidneyweed, Small-flowered Ponyfoot | Damp open areas, lawns, disturbed areas. | Probably native of Neotropics (north to s. TX), the original range uncertain. Reported for Camden County, GA (Carter, Baker, & Morris 2009). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Dichondra recurvata | Pony-foot | Roadsides, creekbanks. | Endemic to TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Distimake | Woodrose | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Distimake aegyptius | Hairy Woodrose | Disturbed areas. | Native of New World tropics. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Distimake cissoides | Roadside Woodrose | Disturbed areas. | Native of Mexico, Central America, n. South America, and West Indies. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Distimake dissectus | Noyau Vine, Alamo Vine, Correhuela de los Doce | Disturbed areas. | Native of the neotropics, the original distribution unclear, but probably native in peninsular FL (Austin 2007) and s. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Distimake quinquefolius | Rock-rosemary | Disturbed areas. | Native of Mexico, Central America, n. South America, and West Indies. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Distimake tuberosus | Yellow Morning-glory | Disturbed areas. | Native of Mexico, Central America, n. South America, and West Indies. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus | Dwarf Morning-glory | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus alsinoides | Slender Dwarf Morning-glory | Coastal hammocks, coastal rock barrens, disturbed areas in shelly coastal areas. | S. FL, s. AL (Dauphin Island), TX, NM, and AZ south into the Neotropics; West Indies; also widely and early introduced throughout the Paleotropics (Austin 2008). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus convolvuloides | Bindweed Dwarf Morning-glory | Beaches, coastal berms, mangrove edges, rock barrens, gaps in rockland hammocks, riverbanks (in LA). | S. peninsular FL and LA; West Indies; s. Mexico, Central America, and South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus discolor | | | | |
| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus filipes | | On ballast (ore piles), not naturalized. | Native of the Neotropics. Reported from ballast in MD (Reed 1964). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus glomeratus ssp. grandiflorus | Blue Daze | Disturbed areas, commonly cultivated in peninsular Florida and possibly weakly naturalizing. | Native of South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus grisebachii | Grisebach’s Dwarf Morning-glory | Pine rocklands. | S. peninsular FL (Big Pine Key, Monroe County); Cuba. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus macilentus | Thin Dwarf Morning-glory | Pine rocklands. | S. peninsular FL (Big Pine Key, Monroe County, and Miami-Dade County); Bahamas. | |
| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus nuttallianus | Shaggy Dwarf Morning-glory | Calcareous glades and barrens, westwards in rocky or gravelly calcareous outcrops. | MO, NE, SD, w. ND, MT and UT south to AR, c. TX, NM, AZ, and Mexico; disjunct in c. TN (Chester, Wofford, & Kral 1997). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus sericeus var. averyi | Avery's Dwarf Morning-glory, Silver Dwarf Morning-glory | Pine rocklands. | S. peninsular FL (Monroe and Miami-Dade counties). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus sericeus var. cymosus | | Longleaf pine sandhills, other dry sandy habitats. | | |
| Convolvulaceae | Evolvulus sericeus var. sericeus | Silky Dwarf Morning-glory, Silver Dwarf Morning-glory | Wet flatwoods, seepages, bogs, Altamaha Grit outcrops, westwards and southwards in dry sandy or limestone habitats. | Coastal Plain of ec. GA (Appling, Jeff Davis, and Coffee counties) (Bridges & Orzell 1989; Patrick, Allison, & Krakow 1995) south to s. FL; AR and LA west to AZ, south into Mexico and the Neotropics; West Indies. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea | Morning-glory | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea alba | Moonflower, Tropical Morning-glory | Hammocks, marsh edges, disturbed areas. | Ne. FL south to s. FL; Mexico south through Central America to Argentina; West Indies. Whether or not Ipomoea alba is native or introduced in our region is unclear. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea amnicola | Red-eye Morning-glory | Fields, roadsides, disturbed areas. | Native of n. and c. South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea aquatica | Water-spinach, Kangkung | Disturbed wetlands. | Native of tropical Asia. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea aristolochiifolia | Tree Morning-glory | Edges of resacas, disturbed areas. | Native of montane Central and South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea asarifolia | Ginger-leaf Morning-glory | Seasonally ponded areas, in both natural and disturbed areas. | The area of nativity of this species is disputed, variously considered the New World tropics or the Old World tropics. Wetterer (2024) discussed the spread of the species in s. FL; it is know known from St. Lucie County southwards. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea batatas | Sweet Potato | Persistent in fields after cultivation, disturbed areas. | Native of tropical America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea batatilla | Bush Morning-glory | Persistent from cultivation in suburban gardens, sandy soils of barrier islands. | Native of w. Brazil and e. Bolivia. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea brasiliensis | Railroad Vine, Goat’s-foot, Bay Hops, Bay Winders | Ocean beaches, dunes. | E. NC (Carteret County), SC (Beaufort, Horry, Charleston, Colleton, and Georgetown counties), south to s. FL, west to TX, and widespread on tropical and subtropical shores of the New World (se. United States, West Indies, Pacific and Atlantic coasts of Central America and South America), and Old World (Atlantic and Indian Ocean coasts of Africa). The records in the Carolinas may reflect the periodic arrival of sea-borne seeds. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea cairica | Mile-a-minute Vine, Cairo Morning-glory | Disturbed areas. | Native of Africa. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea coccinea | Scarlet Creeper, Red Morning-glory | Fields, roadsides, thickets, streambanks. | Unquestionably native of the se. United States, though the details of the pre-Columbian distribution are uncertain. Wood et al. (2020b) stated "endemic to southeastern USA, where it grows on waste ground, roadsides, stream sides and in ditches, apparently with a preference for seasonally moist habitats." | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea cordatotriloba var. cordatotriloba | Coastal Morning-glory, Tie-vine | Dunes, sandy areas on barrier islands, other sandy habitats. | Se. NC south to s. FL, west to e. TX and AR; Mexico. Attribution of this species to South America are based on Ipomoea australis (Wood et al. 2020). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea cordatotriloba var. torreyana | Torrey's Morning-glory | Prairies, disturbed areas. | TX southwards into Mexico (CHH, NLE, TAM). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea corymbosa | Christmas-vine, Aguinaldo Blanco, Aguinaldo de Pascua | Hammocks, shell mounds, disturbed areas. | S. peninsular FL; West Indies; Mexico, Central America, and South America. Very likely native, occurring in hammocks and shell mounds, where probably moved by native Americans. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea costellata | Crestrib Morning-glory | Open woodlands and scrub, disturbed areas. | Sc. and s. TX, NM, and AZ, south to Mexico. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea cristulata | Star-glory | Weakly persistent or spread from cultivation. | Native of w. TX, NM, AZ south to Mexico; used horticulturally and sparsely if at all established in our region. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea edwardsensis | Edwards Plateau Morning-glory | Rocky areas over limestone. | Endemic to Edwards Plateau (and nearly areas) of c. TX, barely reaching our region in Guadeloupe County, TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea grandifolia | | Disturbed areas. | South America (Argentina, Paraguay, Bolivia, and Brazil); also in se. North America, the distribution poorly understood because of previous lack of recognition. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea hederacea | Ivyleaf Morning-glory | Fields, disturbed areas. | ME, MN, ND, NM, AZ, and CA south to s. FL, s. TX, and Mexico; Cuba. Native to the Mexico and the southeastern United States (the core of its distribution), but the more precise limits of its native distribution are obscure (populations in New England, Ontario, and the n. Midwestern US may be only adventive). Its current distribution is centered in southeastern North America and it was encountered there by "early botanists" Michaux and Pursh in the first decades of the 1800s, but its current genetic structure suggests that it may have been introduced (Campitelli & Stinchcombe 2014). Austin (in Davidse et al. 2012) considered its area of nativity to to be the southeastern United States. Austin (1986) also described it as "a temperate plant that grows poorly, if at all, in tropical climes" (in contrast to Ipomoea nil). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea hederifolia | Scarlet Creeper | Moist thickets (especially near-coastal), disturbed areas. | GA and AL, south to s. FL, west to MS; West Indies; Mexico, Central America, and South America. Some of the more inland occurrences likely represent an adventive range extension from horticultural use. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea imperati | Beach Morning-glory | Beaches, dune blowouts, fore-dunes. | Se. NC south to s. FL, west to TX; south through Mexico, Central America to South America; West Indies; Old World tropics. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea indica var. acuminata | Ocean-blue Morning-glory | Hammocks, coastal areas, disturbed areas. | FL west to TX; West Indies, Mexico; Central and South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea lacunosa | Small White Morning-glory, Whitestar | Riverbanks, marshes, swamps, fields, roadsides, disturbed areas. | NJ west to OH, IL, and KS, south to FL and e. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea leptophylla | Bush Morning-glory | Sandy prairies, disturbed areas. | SD and MT south to TX and NM. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea leucantha | Whitestar Morning-glory | Disturbed areas, roadsides. | "Occurs sporadically, principally in the eastern United States and in
Central America south to Ecuador and Brazil" (Wood et al. 2020). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea macrorhiza | Indian-midden Morning-glory, Manroot, Pink Moonvine, Largeroot Morning-glory | Hammocks, shell middens, dunes, dry sands, mesic pine flatwoods, disturbed maritime areas. | Se. NC south to s. FL, west to s. AL. Sometimes, as by WH3 and K2, this species is considered an alien, native of South America, but this is nonsense -- the species is endemic to the se. United States. (Austin 2023n; D. Austin, pers. comm. 2011; Wood et al. 2020). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea microdactyla | Wild-potato Morning-glory, Man-in-the-ground, Bejuco colorado | Pine rocklands. | S. peninsular FL; West Indies (Bahamas, Cuba, Mona Island of Puerto Rico). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea multifida | Cardinal Climber | Cultivated and escaping or persistent locally near plantings. | Horticulturally-derived hybrid of a tropical American (I. quamoclit) and Southeastern US (I. coccinea) parents. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea muricata | Lilacbell, Purple Moonflower | Fields, disturbed areas; native (apparently) of Mexico. | Austin & Jansson (1988) discussed the species’ spread in se. United States, apparently as a contaminant in soybean seeds. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea nervosa | Woolly Morning-glory, Elephant Creeper | Disturbed hammocks. | Native of India. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea nil | | Disturbed areas. | Occurs in scattered states, such as MD and MS, as a rare introduction from tropical America (Kartesz 1999). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea pandurata | Wild Sweet Potato, Manroot, Man-of-the-earth, Bigroot Morning-glory | Longleaf pine sandhills, dry forests and woodlands, prairies, roadbanks, disturbed areas. | CT, NY, and s. ON west to OH, s. MI, and KS, south to c. peninsular FL and e. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea purpurea | Common Morning-glory | Fields, disturbed areas. | Native of tropical America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea quamoclit | Cypress-vine | Fields, hedgerows, disturbed areas. | Native of tropical America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea rupicola | Cliff Morning-glory | Rocky open areas. | S. and w. TX south to adjacent Mexico (COA, NLE, SLP, TAM). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea sagittata | Saltmarsh Morning-glory | Edges of brackish marshes, moist thickets on barrier islands, hammocks. | E. NC south to s. FL, west to TX; eastern Mexico and Central America; West Indies. Also present in the Old World, around the Mediterranean and in n. Africa (the type is from Africa); this distribution is likely from early anthropogenic dispersal from the West Indies. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea setosa ssp. sepacuitensis | Brazilian Morning-glory | Disturbed areas. | Native of Central America (Belize). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea shumardiana | Narrowleaf Morning-glory | Sandy or sandy-clay prairies. | E. and c. KS south through e. and c. OK to n. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea tenuissima | Rockland Morning-glory | Pine rocklands. | S. peninsular FL; West Indies (Cuba, Hispaniola, apparently introduced in Puerto Rico). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea tricolor | Heavenly Blue Morning-glory | Persistent or slightly escaped from horticultural use. | Native of tropical America (Mexico to South America and West Indies). Reported for several locations in se. PA (Rhoads & Klein 1993). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea triloba | Little-bell | Hammocks, sand dunes, disturbed areas. | Apparently native of tropical America. West Indies; New World and Old World tropics. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea violacea | Beach Moonflower, Moonvine | Coastal strands and dunes, maritime hammocks. | S. FL; West Indies, s. Mexico, Central America, and n. South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Ipomoea wrightii | Wright’s Morning-glory | Disturbed areas. | Native of India. Reported as likely naturalized in central TN, "spreading northward from the Gulf Coastal Plain" (Kral 1981). It also is known from GA (Kartesz 1999). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia | Jacquemontia | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia curtissii | Pineland Jacquemontia | Pine rocklands (xero-hydric pine rockland savannas with extensive limestone outcrops, xeric in the dry season, and numerous small to large hydric solution holes), mesic pine flatwoods, marl prairies, calcareous fringing wet prairies. | Endemic to s. FL. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia havanensis | Havana Jacquemontia, Campanitas | Beach dunes, coastal berms, scrubby tropical hammocks. | S. peninsular FL; West Indies; s. Mexico (ROO, YUC) to Central America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia pentanthos | Skyblue Jacquemontia | Pine rocklands, rockland hammocks, coastal rock barrens. | S. peninsular FL; West Indies; Mexico, Central America, and South America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia reclinata | Beach Jacquemontia | Coastal strands. | Endemic to se. peninsular FL (Broward, Martin, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia tamnifolia | Common Jacquemontia | Fields, roadsides, other disturbed areas. | Se. VA south to FL, west to AR and TX; also widespread in West Indies, Central America, and South America, its original range difficult to determine, probably adventive in much of our region. Fox, Godfrey, & Blomquist (1952) reported the first collections of the species in NC, in 1938 and 1950, from obviously disturbed situations. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Jacquemontia verticillata | Whorled Clustervine | Disturbed areas. | Native of West Indies and Central America. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Operculina | | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Operculina pinnatifida | Tansy-leaf Lidpod | Pastures, thornscrub. | S. TX (Cameron County) south through Mexico to Guatemala. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Poranopsis | | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Poranopsis paniculata | Bridal Bouquet | Disturbed areas. | Native of India. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stictocardia | | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stictocardia tiliifolia | Spotted-heart | Disturbed areas. | Native of Asia. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma | Dawnflower | | | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma abdita | Showy Dawnflower | Florida scrub. | Ne. FL (Clay County) south to sw. FL. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma angustifolia | Narrowleaf Dawnflower | Longleaf pine sandhills. | SE. NC south to c. peninsular FL, west to w. Panhandle FL. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma aquatica | Water Dawnflower | Clay-based Carolina bays, wet pine savannas, margins of pineland ponds (vernal pools). | Se. and sc. NC south to c. FL and Panhandle FL, west to se. AR and e. TX. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma humistrata | Southern Dawnflower | Longleaf pine sandhills, dry hammocks, and other dry woodlands, especially on dryish stream terraces. | Se. VA south to Panhandle FL, west to AR and e. TX, north in the interior to n. AL and w. TN. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma patens | Common Dawnflower | Longleaf pine sandhills and other relatively dry sandy areas. | E. NC south to n. FL, and west to s. MS; reports from west of the Mississippi River are misidentifications. | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma pickeringii var. pattersonii | Patterson's Dawnflower | Longleaf pine sandhills, dry sandy prairies, open sandy woodlands, other dry sandy habitats. | IL and IA south through KS and OK to w. LA and e. TX; disjunct in w. MS (the material somewhat ambiguous as to varietal affinity). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma pickeringii var. pickeringii | Pickering's Dawnflower | Longleaf pine sandhills, usually in the driest, most barren, deep-sand areas, occasionally colonizing dry, disturbed areas in sandhills, such as sandy roadbanks, known from the Fall-line Sandhills, aeolian rims of Carolina bays, and sandhills on relict riverine dunes along Coastal Plain rivers. | Var. pickeringii ranges from s. NC south through SC, GA, AL, and e. MS, with a disjunct area in the Pine Barrens of s. NJ, sometimes treated as a separate variety "caesariensis" (see synonymy). | 
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| Convolvulaceae | Stylisma villosa | Hairy Dawnflower | Longleaf pine sandhills, Florida scrub. | S. GA south to s. FL, west to e. TX. | 
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