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4 results for More search options
FamilyScientific Name Common NameHabitatDistributionImage
LauraceaeLindera angustifoliaNarrowleaf Spicebush, Oriental Spicebush, Graybush SpicebushMoist suburban woodlands and forests, naturalizing from horticultural plantings.Native of montane China and Korea.
LauraceaeLindera benzoinNorthern Spicebush, Benzoin, Benjamin-bushRich alluvial forests, mesic forests on slopes with circumneutral soils, bottomlands, swamps.ME, s. ON, and MI, south to Panhandle FL and e. TX; disjunct in Edwards Plateau of c. TX.image of plant
LauraceaeLindera melissifoliaSouthern Spicebush, PondberryPondcypress savannas, wet flats and depressions, generally with pocosin shrubs.This species is southern in range, with a very scattered distribution in se. and c. NC, e. SC, e. & sw. GA, nw. FL, sw. AL (?), nw. MS, se. MO-AR, and se. AR-LA (recent collections unknown from FL and LA). It is nearly extirpated in NC, currently known only from three populations, in Sampson, Bladen, and Cumberland counties. A historic record from Orange County, NC (in the lower Piedmont), collected by Elisha Mitchell in 1820 and 1822, appears to be bonafide (McVaugh, McVaugh, & Ayers 1996).image of plant
LauraceaeLindera subcoriaceaBog SpicebushPeaty seepage bogs in headwaters of blackwater streams, in the sandhills and immediately adjacent Piedmont, with other pocosin shrubs, streamhead pocosins.The overall range of this species is still poorly known; it appears to be a Southeastern Coastal Plain endemic, ranging from se. VA (perhaps s. NJ) south to FL and west to LA.image of plant

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