Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rhamnaceae | Ceanothus ×serpyllifolius | Thymeleaf Ceanothus | Longleaf pine sandhills. | GA and AL south to c. peninsular FL. | |
Rhamnaceae | Ceanothus americanus var. americanus | Common New Jersey Tea, Northeastern Ceanothus | Woodland borders, dry woodlands, gladelike openings, dry ridge forests and woodlands (pine or oak) in the Mountains. | ME west to WI, south to FL Panhandle and AL. | |
Rhamnaceae | Ceanothus americanus var. intermedius | Southeastern New Jersey Tea, Southeastern Ceanothus | Longleaf pine sandhills, dry sandy woodlands and forests, rocky openings around granitic or quartzitic rocks in the Piedmont. | NJ (or possibly MA) south to c. peninsular FL, west to LA, mostly on the Coastal Plain, but disjunct inland to sandy soils around outcrops of siliceous rocks. | |
Rhamnaceae | Ceanothus americanus var. pitcheri | Hairy New Jersey Tea, Midwestern Ceanothus | Prairies, woodland margins. | IN west to IA and NE, south to nw. GA and e. and c. TX. | |
Rhamnaceae | Ceanothus herbaceus | Prairie Redroot, Prairie Ceanothus | Prairies, glades, upland woodlands, eastwards in flood-scoured rocky and/or sandy riverbanks. | Primarily midwestern: MI west to MT, south to nw. IN, AR, TX, and Mexico; disjunct eastward in QC, NH, VT, NY, KY, TN, and DC. | |
Rhamnaceae | Ceanothus microphyllus | Sandhill Ceanothus | Longleaf pine sandhills. | E. GA south to c. peninsular FL, west to s. AL, approaching to within a few kilometers of SC (in Screven and Chatham counties, GA), and should be sought in se. SC (except that its outlandish appearance makes it difficult to overlook!). |
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