Family | Scientific Name | Common Name | Habitat | Distribution | Image |
Arecaceae | Sabal brazoriensis | Brazoria Palmetto | Floodplain forests. | Endemic to a small area of Brazoria County, Texas, in and around the Palm Unit of San Bernard National Wildlife Refuge. | 
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Arecaceae | Sabal etonia | Scrub Palmetto, Scrub-cabbage, Corkscrew Palm | Florida scrub. | Endemic to FL (Clay County, FL south to Miami-Dade County, FL, primarily on the Lake Wales Ridge but also on coastal and intermediate ridges) | |
Arecaceae | Sabal mexicana | Mexican Palmetto, Rio Grande Palmetto, Texas Palm, Palma de Micharos | Floodplains, hammocks, swamps. | Se. TX, south to Mexico, and Central America (Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua). | 
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Arecaceae | Sabal miamiensis | Miami Palmetto | Sandy pine rocklands and scrubby hardwood hammock in the northern end of the Miami Rock Ridge. | Endemic to s. FL. | 
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Arecaceae | Sabal minor | Dwarf Palmetto | Swamps, maritime forests, low moist woods, especially in calcareous soils developed from shell limestone (marl), hardwood flatwoods, marshes, saline barrens, also rarely planted as an ornamental farther inland, where persisting (and appearing native) or possibly naturalizing. | Ne. NC (Currituck County)(or possibly se. VA?) south to c. peninsular FL, west to e. TX, c. TX, se. OK, and s. AR; disjunct in Nuevo León (Goldman 1999). This palm reaches its northern natural range limit at Monkey Island, Currituck County, NC, and other more inland sites just a few miles south of the VA border (L. Musselman, J. Boggan, pers. comm., 2006); no other New World palm has a native range extending so far north. It has been widely planted horticulturally in se. VA and is now naturalized there. | 
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Arecaceae | Sabal palmetto | Cabbage Palmetto | Maritime forests, marsh edges, and other near-coastal communities. | Native from se. NC south to s. FL, west to w. Panhandle FL, and in the West Indies in Cuba and the Bahamas; planted beyond that range, especially on the Gulf Coast. | 
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