20 results for Family: Magnoliaceae. More search options
FamilyScientific Name Common NameHabitatDistributionImage
MagnoliaceaeLiriodendronTulip-treeimage of plant
(c) Bradley, Keith
MagnoliaceaeLiriodendron species 1Florida Tulip-treeSwamps, usually where seasonally ponded.Endemic to n. FL peninsula, south to Orange, Lake, and Pasco counties.
MagnoliaceaeLiriodendron tulipifera var. 1Coastal Plain Tulip-tree, Southern Yellow PoplarStreamhead pocosins, pineland seepage swamps, small blackwater stream swamps.Sc. and se. NC south to Panhandle FL, west to s. MS.image of plant
(c) Ward, Scott G
MagnoliaceaeLiriodendron tulipifera var. tulipiferaTulip-tree, Yellow Poplar, WhitewoodMesic forests, cove forests in the Mountains to at least 1500m in elevation, bottomland forests and swamps.MA, VT, NY, ON, MI, and n. IL south to Panhandle FL and w. LA; also spread elsewhere from cultivation.image of plant
(c) Bradley, Keith
MagnoliaceaeMagnoliaMagnolia, Cucumber-treeimage of plant
(c) Fleming, Gary P.
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia ×soulangeanaSaucer Magnolia, Tulip MagnoliaCultivated, persistent or weakly naturalizing near plantings.Reported for Barbour and Morgan counties, AL (D. Spaulding, pers. comm., 2013) and scattered other sites in eastern North America outside of our flora area (Kartesz 2010)image of plant
(c) McWilliam, Stephen James - CC0
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia acuminata var. acuminataCucumber-tree, Cucumber MagnoliaMesic to subxeric forests, especially (but by no means strictly) over mafic or calcareous rocks, up to at least 1550m (where growing with Betula alleghaniensis, Abies fraseri, Picea rubens, and Sorbus americana), ultramafic outcrop barrens (where codominant with Pinus rigida and Quercus alba).S. ME, MY, c. IN, s. MO, and e. OK, south to c. GA, w. Panhandle FL (Holmes and Walton counties), s. AL, s. MS, and w. LA.image of plant
(c) Chan, Kalvin - CC-BY
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia acuminata var. subcordataYellow Cucumber-tree, Showy Cucumber Magnolia, Yellow-flowered MagnoliaMoist to dry slopes and bottomlands over mafic or calcareous rocks.Var. subcordata ranges from sc. NC south to AL.image of plant
© Bruce Sorrie
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia asheiAshe’s MagnoliaMoist to wet hammocks.Endemic to FL Panhandle.image of plant
(c) Ward, Scott G
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia figoBanana-shrubNative of e. Asia. Reported for several counties in MS (Kartesz 2022).image of plant
(c) Dandridge, Clara - CC-BY
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia fraseriFraser Magnolia, Mountain Magnolia, Earleaf Umbrella-treeMesic to dry forests.A Southern and Central Appalachian endemic: sw. PA (found in the 2010s, S. Grund, pers. comm., 2019), KY, and w. VA south through w. NC and e. TN to nw. SC, n. GA, and ne. AL.image of plant
(c) Bridges, Edwin
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia grandifloraSouthern Magnolia, Bull Bay, LaurelMaritime forests, mesic Coastal Plain bluffs and flats, bottomlands, now also widely naturalized, spreading from cultivation into wet to mesic (and even dry) forests.The pre-Columbian range was apparently from se. NC south to c. peninsular FL, west to e. TX, largely on the Coastal Plain, now somewhat expanded northward and inland by naturalization from centuries of horticultural planting and spread by birds to nearby forests. Curtis (1860) states that "the northern limit of this tree is in Brunswick County [NC], south of the Cape Fear; but it flourishes in cultivation through all the lower part of the State".image of plant
(c) Fleming, Gary P.
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia kobusKobus Magnolia, Kobushi MagnoliaSuburban woodlands.Native of Japan.image of plant
(c) Wang, Zihao - CC-BY
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia macrophyllaBigleaf MagnoliaMesic forests, primarily over limestone, other calcareous sedimentary rocks (calcareous shales, sandstones, etc.), or mafic rocks (east of the Blue Ridge), mesic hammocks in the Coastal Plain.S. OH and sw. VA south through e. TN to w. GA, west to AL, MS, n. LA, and se. AR (Sundell et al. 1999); disjunct on Crowleys Ridge in ne. AR (population now extirpated), c. and nc. SC, and e. SC (where probably not native). The range of this species is sometimes stated in such a way as to imply that it is a tree of the southern Blue Ridge, which it barely and marginally enters. Actually, it avoids the Southern Blue Ridge, reaching its greatest abundance in the sedimentary rock Appalachians west of the Blue Ridge, particularly the Cumberland Plateau, and occurs east of the Blue Ridge only as a rare disjunct.image of plant
(c) Hill, Sonnia
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia pyramidataPyramid MagnoliaMesic hammocks, mesic forests, especially of bluffs and ravines.A Southeastern Coastal Plain endemic: c. SC south to Panhandle FL, west to e. TX.image of plant
(c) Alford, Mac
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia stellataStar MagnoliaSuburban woodlands.Native of e. Asia. Reported for s. OH by Riley, Vincent, & Widrlechner (2020).image of plant
(c) Hallock, Robert M - CC-BY
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia tripetalaUmbrella Magnolia, Umbrella-treeMesic forests, ravines.Centered in the Southern Appalachians, but avoiding higher elevations, and therefore occurring primarily "around" the Blue Ridge; ranging from sc. and sw. PA, s. OH, s. IN south to SC, GA, Panhandle FL (Tobe 2007), AL, and MS; also disjunct in the Ouachita Mountains of c. AR and e. OK.image of plant
(c) Bradley, Keith
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia virginiana var. australisSouthern Sweet BayPocosins, bay forests, and swamps in the Coastal Plain, streamhead pocosins, swamps, and sandhill seeps in the Sandhills, bogs and peaty swamps in the Piedmont and Mountains.Se. NC south to s. FL, and west to e. TX, rarely extending into more interior provinces; disjunct in nw. Cuba.image of plant
(c) Hill, Sonnia
MagnoliaceaeMagnolia virginiana var. virginianaNorthern Sweet BayPocosins, bay forests, and swamps in the Coastal Plain, streamhead pocosins, swamps, and sandhill seeps in the fall-line Sandhills, bogs and peaty swamps in the Piedmont.Se. MA south to w. NC, s. SC, and e. GA.image of plant
(c) Weakley, Alan
MagnoliaceaeMagnoliaceaeMagnolia Familyimage of plant
(c) Bradley, Keith