24 results for family: Oxalidaceae.
Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalidaceae | Wood-sorrel Family | | | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis | Wood-sorrel, Oxalis | | | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis articulata | Pink-sorrel, Windowbox Sorrel | Roadsides, old gardens. | Native of South America. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis brasiliensis | | Disturbed roadsides. | Native of Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis colorea | Small’s Wood-sorrel | Longleaf pine sandhills, dry-mesic and mesic forests, thin soils around rock outcrops, disturbed areas. | E. MD and sc. and w.VA west to MO, south to n. FL and e. LA. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis corniculata | Creeping Lady's-sorrel | Gardens, fields, disturbed areas, sometimes more natural areas including pinelands, dunes. | Probably native of New World tropics and subtropics, possibly including the deeper South. Now nearly worldwide in distribution. Many reports and records appear to me | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis debilis | | Disturbed areas. | Native of South America. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis dichondrifolia | Agrito | Chaparral, dunes. | S. TX south into Mexico (COA, NLE, SLP, TAM, VER). | |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis dillenii | Southern Yellow Wood-sorrel | Roadsides, pastures, lawns, a wide variety of other habitats. | NS west to SK, south to FL, TX, NM; introduced elsewhere. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis drummondii | Drummond's Wood-sorrel | Prairies, post oak woodlands. | Nc. TX south through s. TX and w. TX to Mexico (COA, NLE, SLP, TAM). | |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis florida | | Floodplain forests, moist fields, ditches, bluffs, and moist slopes. | VT and CT south to FL, west to LA, AR, and MO. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis frutescens ssp. angustifolia | Shrubby Wood-sorrel | Sandy soils of live oak copses. | S. TX south into Mexico, Central America, and South America. | |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis grandis | Great Yellow Wood-sorrel | Rich moist forests, rocky bluffs. | PA, OH, and IN, south to SC, GA, AL, MS. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis hispidula | | Lawns, wet ditches, disturbed roadsides. | Native of Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Brazil. See Horne, Barger, & Nesom (2013) and Franck et al. (2016) for additional and more detailed information. Also abundant in lawns in Monroe, LA (Ouachita Parish). Kelley & Vincent (2020) report naturalization in multiple areas in Louisiana. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis illinoensis | Illinois Wood-sorrel | Dry to dry-mesic forests and bluffs, often but not necessarily calcareous. | S. IN and s. IL south through KY to c. TN. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis intermedia | West Indian Wood-sorrel, Cuban Purple Wood-sorrel | Disturbed areas. | FL west to CA, south into the New World tropics; West Indies. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis macrantha | Sadie Price’s Yellow Wood-sorrel | Rich woodlands. | KY and TN south to GA, Panhandle FL, AL, MS, and se. LA; disjunct in c. NC | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis montana | American Wood-sorrel, White Wood-sorrel, Forest Shamrock | Spruce-fir forests, northern hardwood forests, restricted to high elevations southwards. | QC and NY west to SK, south to GA, NC, and TN. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis pes-caprae | | Disturbed areas. | Native of Africa. Reported for Mobile County, AL (Barger et al. 2023). | |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis species 1 | Asynchronous Violet Wood-sorrel | Longleaf pine sandhills, Altamaha grit glades. | S. GA and adjacent FL. It is unclear if this species occurs in e. TX and s. AR. | |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis stricta | Common Yellow Wood-sorrel | Disturbed areas, also in a variety of natural habitats. | Widespread in North America south to n. Mexico, now widespread nearly worldwide. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis texana | Texas Wood-sorrel | Glades, woodlands, forests. | Panhandle FL and AL west to TX. Nativity of populations east of the MS river is uncertain. | 
|
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis triangularis | Purple Shamrock | Disturbed areas. | Native of Brazil and Argentina. See Serviss, Hardage, & Peck (2021) for discussion of marginal naturalization in AR. | |
Oxalidaceae | Oxalis violacea | Violet Wood-sorrel | Dry to moist forests. | MA, VT, MI, SD, and CO south to FL, TX, and AZ. | 
|