Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Campanulaceae | Campanula divaricata | Southern Harebell, Appalachian Bellflower | Rock outcrops, cliffs, rocky summits, talus, up to at least 1850m. | A broad endemic of the Southern and Central Appalachians: MD and KY south to AL and GA. | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula glomerata | Dane's-blood, Clustered Bellflower | Fields, roadsides, gardens. | Native of Eurasia. | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula intercedens | Bluebell, Harebell | Limestone outcrops, high elevation rocky summits (in thin soil over amphibolite), serpentine barrens. | Campanula is a northeastern North American species that is a component of the circumboreal Campanula rotundifolia species complex. In our region, it is rare, and generally limited to limestone northwards and to mafic rocks in nw. NC. It was added to the flora of NC in 1991 (Three Top Mountain, Ashe County). | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula latifolia | Giant Bellflower | Cultivated in gardens, rare as a waif. | Native of Europe to w. Asia. | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula medium | Canterbury Bells | Escaping from horticultural use. | Native of Europe. | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula persicifolia | Peachleaf Bellflower, Willow Bellflower | Rarely cultivated in gardens, perhaps persistent. | Native of Eurasia. This species was reported by Small (1933) as "escaping from gardens" in w. NC; no specimens have been seen to document this occurrence. Additional documentation is needed to confirm this record. | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula punctata | Spotted Bellflower | Native of Korea, Japan, and e. Siberia. | ||
Campanulaceae | Campanula rapunculoides | Rampion Bellflower, Rover Bellflower, Creeping Bellflower | Disturbed areas, roadsides. | Native of Eurasia. | |
Campanulaceae | Campanula trachelium | Bats-in-the-belfry, Nettleleaf Bellflower, Throatwort | Disturbed areas. | Native of Mediterranean Europe, n. Africa, and w. Asia. |
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