Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis albida | Wild Four-o’clock, Pale Umbrella-wort, White Four-o’clock | Longleaf pine sandhills, limestone glades and barrens, prairies, pastures, adjacent disturbed dry soils. | S. SC south to GA, west to TX, north in the interior to c. TN, IA, and KS; Mexico, Central America. | 
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Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis austrotexana | South Texas Four-o'-Clock | Mudflats. | Sc. and s. TX, perhaps south into TAM. | |
Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis gigantea | Giant Four-o'clock | Sandy open areas, woodlands. | Endemic to TX and w. OK. | |
Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis jalapa var. jalapa | Garden Four-o’clock, Marvel-of-Peru, Morning-rose | Disturbed areas, or persistent at former garden sites. | Native of tropical America. | 
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Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis latifolia | | Blackland prairies, calcareous areas. | Ne. and c. TX. | |
Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis linearis var. linearis | Narrow-leaved Four-o’clock | Prairies, pastures, woodlands over rocky or sandy soils, disturbed areas. | MB, SK, and AB south to MO, TX, NM, AZ, and Mexico; rarely adventive eastwards. | 
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Nyctaginaceae | Mirabilis nyctaginea | Heart-leaved Umbrella-wort, Heartleaf Four-o’clock | Upland prairies, streambanks, riverbanks, also in disturbed situations (as eastwards) such as railroad embankments, other disturbed areas. | MI, WI, ON, and AB south to LA, TX, and NM, the exact native distribution obscured by subsequent spread. André Michaux collected this species from bluffs of the Cumberland River in 1795, suggesting native status for that area. | 
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