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6 results for More search options
FamilyScientific Name Common NameHabitatDistributionImage
RhamnaceaeCeanothus ×serpyllifoliusThymeleaf CeanothusLongleaf pine sandhills.GA and AL south to c. peninsular FL.
RhamnaceaeCeanothus americanus var. americanusCommon New Jersey Tea, Northeastern CeanothusWoodland 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.image of plant
RhamnaceaeCeanothus americanus var. intermediusSoutheastern New Jersey Tea, Southeastern CeanothusLongleaf 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.image of plant
RhamnaceaeCeanothus americanus var. pitcheriHairy New Jersey Tea, Midwestern CeanothusPrairies, woodland margins.IN west to IA and NE, south to nw. GA and e. and c. TX.image of plant
RhamnaceaeCeanothus herbaceusPrairie Redroot, Prairie CeanothusPrairies, 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.image of plant
RhamnaceaeCeanothus microphyllusSandhill CeanothusLongleaf 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!).image of plant

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