Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Lamiaceae | Clinopodium acinos | Mother-of-thyme, Basil-thyme | Cultivated, rarely escaped or persisting. | Native of Europe. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium arkansanum | Arkansas Calamint | Dry to moist limestone glades, chalk barren (MS). | ON west to MN, south to w. NY, nw. PA, w. VA, WV, IL, c. TN, and s. WI; also in MO, OK, AR, and TX. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium ascendens | Common Calamint | Rich calcareous slope. | Native of Europe. | |
Lamiaceae | Clinopodium ashei | Ashe's Calamint, Ashe's Savory, Ohoopee Dunes Wild Basil | White sand Florida scrub; longleaf pine sandhills. | Peninsular FL (Marion and Volusia counties south to Highlands and possibly Glades counties); disjunct in e. GA (Candler and Tatnall counties). |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium brownei | Browne's Savory | Floodplain forests, pondshores. | Sw. GA and s. FL west to e. and s. TX; Mexico, Central America, and South America. In sw. GA (Jones & Coile 1988) and reported for SC (Beaufort County, SC) (Daniel Payne, pers. comm. 2006, specimen at CLEMS). |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium calamintha | Lesser Calamint, Basil-thyme | Disturbed areas. | Native of Europe. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium coccineum | Scarlet Calamint, Scarlet Wild Basil, Red Mint Shrub | Longleaf pine sandhills and pine flatwoods. | E. GA south to c. peninsular FL, west to s. MS. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium dentatum | Florida Calamint, Toothed Savory | Longleaf pine sandhills and xeric steepheads. | Endemic to Panhandle FL. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium georgianum | Georgia Calamint | Longleaf pine sandhills, dry rocky or sandy woodlands. | S. NC south to Panhandle FL and west to LA. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium glabellum | | Dry-mesic to mesic shaley forests, dry to moist limestone barrens and glades. | Nc. KY, c. TN, south to c. AL; possibly in AR and s. MO as well. Reports of this for VA (Kartesz 1999) are apparently based on confusion with Clinopodium arkansanum. |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium gracile | Slender Wild Basil | Disturbed areas, roadsides, bottomland forests. | Native of Asia. Introduced in s. AL, FL, LA (Kartesz 1999; Woods, Diamond, & Searcy 2003), MS (S.W. Leonard, pers. comm. 2005), GA (Zomlefer et al. 2011, 2012), and SC (Bradley et al. [in prep.]). |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium macrocalyx | Large-flowered Scarlet Calamint | Longleaf pine sandhills and pine flatwoods. | Ec. peninsular FL (Seminole, Orange, and Brevard counties). | |
Lamiaceae | Clinopodium species 1 | Indian Grave Mountain Wild Basil | Montane longleaf pine/chestnut oak/Georgia oak woodlands on Hollis quartzite along the main Pine Mountain ridge. | Pine Mountain, GA. | |
Lamiaceae | Clinopodium talladeganum | Talladega Wild Basil | Open to sparsely wooded, upland, dry rocky or older dry sandy alluvium substrates. | Endemic to the Talladega Mountains/Piedmont transition of AL (Calhoun, Clay, & Cleburne counties). |
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Lamiaceae | Clinopodium vulgare | Wild Basil | Pastures, roadbanks, forests, thin soils around rock outcrops. | NL (Newfoundland) to MB, south to NC, sc. TN, and KS; widespread in Europe; scattered in w. North America, apparently as an introduction. Plants in our area reflect both native and introduced genotypes. |
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