Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Asteraceae | Coreopsis aristulata | | Wet pine savannas, underlain by calcareous rock. | Known from several sites on the Onslow-Pender county (NC) line, where growing with other narrow endemics, such as Thalictrum cooleyi, Carex lutea, Allium species 1, and Scleria bellii. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis auriculata | Lobed Coreopsis, Mouse-ear Coreopsis, Dwarf Coreopsis | Moist slopes and woodlands. | C. and ne. VA, s. WV, and KY south to MS, AL, and GA. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis bakeri | Florida Glade Coreopsis | Calcareous glades. | Endemic to Jackson County, FL. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis basalis | Texas Coreopsis | Sandy roadsides and fields. | Probably native only west of the Mississippi River (s. AR and s. OK south to se. LA and s. TX), now distributed across the Coastal Plain from TX east to FL and north to NC. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis falcata | Pool Coreopsis | Peat bogs, very wet savannas, ditches and borrow pits in savannas. | The species is endemic to the Coastal Plain of se. VA (City of Chesapeake), e. NC, e. SC, and e. GA; disjunct in Oconee County, SC and Henderson County, NC. First reported for VA by Wieboldt et al. (1998). | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis floridana | Florida Coreopsis | Mesic to wet pine flatwoods, longleaf pine flatwoods, wet disturbed areas, mixed herbaceous seepage slopes, wet prairies. | FL Panhandle south to s. FL (largely absent from ne. FL). Two vouchers initially labeled as C. floridana in Tift and Grady counties, GA (S. Carr 6248; R. Kral 94508) have both been annotated as C. gladiata by A. Franck and D. Spaulding, respectively (S. Ward, pers. comm.). This species; therefore, appears to be a true Florida endemic, having never been legitimately vouchered from Georgia. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis gladiata | Seepage Coreopsis | Wet pine savannas, wet pine flatwoods, sandhill seepage bogs, pitcher plant bogs, cataract bogs. | Se. NC south to c. FL and west to s. MS; scattered inland as a disjunct in montane (and sometimes uppermost piedmontane) sw. NC, nw. SC, and n. GA. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis grandiflora var. grandiflora | Large-flowered Coreopsis | In thin soils of rock outcrops, especially granitic flatrocks and granite domes. | Var. grandiflora ranges from c. GA and w. SC west to e. TX and e. OK, very scattered in distribution; it differs from var. harveyana in having the leaf divisions 2-6 mm wide (vs. 0.5-2 mm wide). | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis grandiflora var. harveyana | Large-flowered Coreopsis | Sandy woodlands, disturbed areas. | Var. harveyana is the most abundant variety of the C. grandiflora complex, probably originally endemic to AR, n. LA, ne. TX, OK, e. KS, and s. and c. MO, but now scattered eastward to IN, NC, and SC. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis grandiflora var. inclinata | Ketona Tickseed, Ketona Coreopsis | Dolomite glades. | Endemic to dolomitic Ketona glades of c. AL (Allison & Stevens 2001). | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis grandiflora var. longipes | | Sandy woods. | Var. longipes (Hooker) Torrey & Gray is endemic to e. TX and s. OK. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis grandiflora var. saxicola | Stone Mountain Coreopsis | Granitic and sandstone outcrops. | C. GA, ec. AL, MS, and nc. AR. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis integrifolia | Chipola Dye-flower | Banks and floodplains of small blackwater streams (especially over limestone), edges of swamp forests bordering longleaf pinelands or bordering brackish marshes, floodplain-adjacent roadsides and pipeline rights-of-way. | Se. SC south to FL Panhandle, apparently rare throughout its range. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis intermedia | Goldenwave Tickseed | In deep sandy soils in openings of post oak woodlands, longleaf pine and shortleaf pine woodlands, and other dry sandy woodlands. | Sw. AR south to w. LA and e. TX. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis lanceolata | Longstalk Coreopsis | Open sandy prairies; eastwards in disturbed areas. | S. MA, MI and WI south to c. peninsular FL, e. TX, and NM. Often spread from cultivation, its original range obscure, but perhaps limited to the sc. United States. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis leavenworthii | Leavenworth’s Tickweed | Wet pine flatwoods, adjacent ditches. | S. GA and s. AL south to and s. FL. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis linifolia | Savanna Coreopsis; Millipede Tickseed | Pine savannas, sandhill seeps, sandhill-pocosin ecotones. | Se. VA south to ne. and Panhandle FL, west to e. TX. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis nudata | Swamp Coreopsis | Seasonally flooded pineland depressions, either herbaceous-dominated or under a canopy of Taxodium ascendens. | E. GA (in close proximity to SC) south to ne. FL and Panhandle FL, west to e. LA. See Barger et al. (2023) for confirmation of its imperilment in AL. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis nuecensis | Crown Tickseed | Sandy soils of oak woodlands. | Native of c. and s. TX; introduced eastward, as in e. LA and St. Johns County, FL. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis nuecensoides | Rio Grande Tickseed, Rio Grande Coreopsis, Sand Coreopsis | Sandy soils of post oak and oak-mesquite woodlands. | E., se., and s. TX. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis palustris | Beadle's Coreopsis | Blackwater swamp forests, wet and very wet loamy pine savannas, tidal freshwater swamp forests, swamp edges, borrow pits. | Se. NC south to ne. FL (records outside this area, so far as is known, all represent misidentifications). | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis pubescens var. debilis | | Pine flatwoods, other habitats. | C. TN south through AL and ne. MS to w. FL, s. AL, s. MS, and se. LA. | |
Asteraceae | Coreopsis pubescens var. pubescens | Common Hairy Coreopsis | Forests, woodlands, and rock outcrops. | The species as a whole is largely centered in the Southern Appalachians and Ozarks-Ouachitas, with scattered outlying occurrences; var. pubescens has essentially the range of the species, from s. VA, s. KY, s. IL, and s. MO south to nw. FL, MS, and LA. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis pubescens var. robusta | Mountain Hairy Coreopsis | Rocky slopes, glades, edges of rock outcrops. | Jul-Sep. Var. robusta is a Southern Appalachian endemic, known from sw. VA, w. NC, nw. SC, n. GA, e. TN, and c. AL. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis rosea | Pink Coreopsis | Upland depression ponds in the Inner Coastal Plain, drawdown zones on banks of blackwater rivers in the Outer Coastal Plain, rocky glades. | Coastal Plain of s. NS, MA, RI, NY (Long Island), NJ, PA (Rhoads & Block 2007), DE, MD, e. SC, and e. GA, where it occurs on shores with fluctuating water levels, primarily on Coastal Plain pond shores, but also on river banks; inland on this soils over rock. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis tinctoria var. atkinsoniana | | Roadsides. | Apparently introduced eastward in nw. GA from a distribution in nw. North America. | |
Asteraceae | Coreopsis tinctoria var. similis | | | Endemic to s. TX and adjacent n. Mexico (NLE, TAM). | |
Asteraceae | Coreopsis tinctoria var. tinctoria | Calliopsis, Plains Coreopsis | Streambanks, riverbanks, roadsides and other disturbed places. | Var. tinctoria was apparently widespread in the Great Plains and sc. United States, now distributed nearly throughout North America. | 
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Asteraceae | Coreopsis wrightii | | Calcareous soils, rock outcrops, savanna openings, oak-juniper woodlands, sometimes in disturbed areas or dry roadsides. | Mainly endemic to the Edwards Plateau, TX. | 
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