52 results for family: Crassulaceae.
Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Crassulaceae | Aizopsis | Aizoön | | | |
Crassulaceae | Aizopsis aizoon | Orpin Aizoon | Cultivated and occasionally escaping. | Native of e. Asia. | |
Crassulaceae | Aizopsis ellacombeana ssp. ellacombeana | Ellacombe's Stonecrop | Grown horticulturally, rarely spreading. | Native of e. and n. Asia. | |
Crassulaceae | Bryophyllum | | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Crassula | | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Crassula aquatica | Pygmyweed | Tidal marshes and shores, shores and mudflats of artificial lakes and reservoirs. | Occurring in tidal marshes and shores, south to MD and se. PA, and also inland along shores and mudflats of inland reservoirs in SC, GA, and AL (Kartesz 1999, FNA, England 2013). Reported for AL by England (2013). | 
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Crassulaceae | Crassula drummondii | | Pond margins, other muddy shores, damp bare ground, mudflats, wet pathways, eastwards in a waste area around wool-combing mill (where perhaps merely a waif). | KS and CO south to TX. | |
Crassulaceae | Crassula longipes | Louisiana Pygmyweed | Aquatic or stranded on sand or mud. | MS and AR south to LA, TX, and Mexico; also s. South America. | |
Crassulaceae | Crassula solieri | | Shores. | W. North America, C. and se. TX; Mexico (Baja California); Chile. | |
Crassulaceae | Crassulaceae | Stonecrop Family | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Diamorpha | Elf-orpine | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Diamorpha smallii | Elf-orpine | In very thin soil (generally less than 2 cm deep) of vernally wet depressions on granite and sandstone flatrocks and other acidic outcrops. | Primarily limited to granitic flatrocks of the Piedmont, ranging from sc. VA to ec. AL, and on sandstone from se. TN south into c. AL. | 
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Crassulaceae | Hylotelephium | Live-for-ever | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Hylotelephium erythrostictum | Garden Orpine, Live-for-ever | Disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. | 
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Crassulaceae | Hylotelephium telephioides | Allegheny Live-for-ever | Rock outcrops, mostly at high to moderate elevations, ascending to 2000 m. | Essentially a Central and Southern Appalachian endemic, H. telephioides ranges from s. PA south to w. NC, with a few outlying populations to the west in s. IL, s. IN, and w. KY. The species is apparently not known from TN. | 
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Crassulaceae | Hylotelephium telephium | Live-for-ever | Disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe | Kalanchoë | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe ×houghtonii | Mother-of-millions | Disturbed areas. | Of garden origin, the two parents from s. Africa. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe blossfeldiana | Christmas Kalanchoe | Disturbed areas. | Native of Madagascar. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe crenata | Kalanchoe | Hammocks, disturbed areas, roadsides. | Native of Africa. | |
Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe daigremontiana | Maternity Plant, Devil’s Backbone, Alligator-plant, Mother-of-millions | Disturbed areas. | Native of Madagascar. Barger et al. (2012) describe the first naturalizing population in AL; McNair, Alford, & Turnbull (2014) describe its naturalization in Orleans Parish, LA. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe delagoensis | Chandelier Plant, Tingo Tingo | Suburban areas, disturbed areas. | Native of Madagascar. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe fedtschenkoi | Lavender Scallops | Disturbed areas. | Native of Madagascar. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe laetivirens | | A waif at least near plantings. | Native of Madagascar. | 
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Crassulaceae | Kalanchoe pinnata | Cathedral Bells, Life Plant, Good Luck Plant, Mother-of-millions, Live-leaf, Shadow-witch | Suburban areas, disturbed areas. | Native of Madagascar. | 
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Crassulaceae | Lenophyllum | | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Lenophyllum texanum | | Dunes, open clay and sand areas. | Se. and s. TX south to NLE and TAM. | 
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Crassulaceae | Petrosedum | | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Petrosedum rupestre | | Disturbed rock outcrops. | Native of Europe. Reported for nc. GA (Jones & Coile 1988), as S. reflexum Linnaeus. | 
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Crassulaceae | Phedimus | | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Phedimus spurius | False Stonecrop | Escaped from cultivation. | Native of the Caucasus. | |
Crassulaceae | Rhodiola | Roseroot | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Rhodiola rosea ssp. roanensis | Roseroot, Goldenroot, King's Crown | High elevation rocky summits, over 5500 feet elevation | Roan Mountain (Mitchell County, NC) and Grandfather Mountain (Avery County, NC), where nearly (if not completely) extirpated. | |
Crassulaceae | Rhodiola rosea ssp. rosea | Roseroot, Goldenroot, King's Crown | Cliffs. | Circumboreal, widely distributed in northern Europe, Asia, and North America, south in e. North America to e. PA. | |
Crassulaceae | Sedum | Stonecrop, Orpine, Sedum | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum acre | Wallpepper, Mossy Stonecrop, Golden Carpet, Gold-moss, Bitter Stonecrop | Rock outcrops, gravel parking lots, disturbed areas, commonly cultivated. | Native of Europe. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum album | White Stonecrop | Disturbed areas. | Native of Eurasia. Introduced and naturalized as far south as se. PA and WV. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum diffusum | | Granite flatrocks, cemetery lawns. | Native of Mexico. Discovered naturalized on a granite flatrock in ec. AL (N. Yawn, pers.comm. 2021), and in a cemetery lawn in the Coastal Plain of Pike County, AL (Diamond & Keener 2021). | |
Crassulaceae | Sedum emarginatum | Emarginate Stonecrop | Disturbed areas. | Native of e. Asia. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum glaucophyllum | Cliff Stonecrop | Rock outcrops, usually basic and/or sedimentary. | Endemic to the Central and Southern Appalachians (extending into the Piedmont), known from MD, WV, VA, and NC (reports for GA are based on confusion with S. nevii). | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum hispanicum | Spanish Stonecrop | Disturbed areas. | Native of the eastern Mediterranean, mainly in w. Asia. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum lineare | Needle Stonecrop | Margin of granitic flatrock. | Native of e. Asia. Duncan (1985) discusses the establishment of this species in Columbia County, GA. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum mexicanum | Mexican Stonecrop | Dry, disturbed areas. | Native of Mexico or perhaps e. Asia. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum nevii | Nevius's Stonecrop | Gneiss and phyllite rock outcrops on river bluffs. | Endemic to se. TN (Polk County, just west of Cherokee County, NC) (Chester, Wofford, & Kral 1997), nc. and ec. AL, and wc. GA (where it occurs on gneiss outcrops along the Chattahoochee River in Muscogee and Harris counties), and reported for s. WV (Greenbrier County) by Harmon, Ford-Werntz, & Grafton (2006). | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum nuttallii | Nuttall's Stonecrop, Yellow Stonecrop | Sandstone and chert glades, also limestone outcrops (in TX). | Sw. MO and se. KS south through AR and OK to nw. LA and TX. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum pulchellum | Widow’s-cross, Bluff Moss | Calcareous rock outcrops. | E. TN (Monroe, Knox, and Bradley counties) (Chester, Wofford, & Kral 1997) and nw. GA (Jones & Coile 1988) west to KS, OK, and TX. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum pusillum | Puck's Orpine | In very thin soil (generally less than of vernally wet depressions on granite flatrocks, often in mats of the moss Hedwigia ciliata. | Endemic to granite flatrocks of the southeastern Piedmont, from sc. NC south to wc. GA. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum sarmentosum | Stringy Stonecrop, Gold Moss Stonecrop, Graveyard-moss | Xeric rock outcrops, stone walls, disturbed areas. | Native of China. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum sexangulare | Tasteless Stonecrop | Waif from horticultural use. | Native of Europe and w. Asia. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sedum ternatum | Mountain Stonecrop, Whorled Stonecrop | Moist forests, coves, bottomlands, shaded rock outcrops. | NJ west to MI and IA, south to nw. GA, c. AL, and sw. AR. | 
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Crassulaceae | Sempervivum | Hen-and-chickens, Houseleek | | | 
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Crassulaceae | Sempervivum tectorum | Hen-and-chickens, Houseleek, Hens-and-chicks | Disturbed areas, cultivated as a rock garden and potted plant, rarely persistent. | Native of Europe. S. tectorum was reported for VA by Massey (1961) as "escapes from cultivation"; the documentation of this is unknown, but the record has been perpetuated by Lis in FNA (2009), and others. | 
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