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22 results for More search options
FamilyScientific Name Common NameHabitatDistributionImage
OxalidaceaeOxalis articulataPink-sorrel, Windowbox SorrelRoadsides, old gardens.Native of South America.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis brasiliensisDisturbed roadsides.Native of Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis coloreaSmall’s Wood-sorrelLongleaf pine sandhills, dry-mesic and mesic forests, thin soils around rock outcrops, disturbed areas.E. MD and sc. and w.VA west to MO, south to n. FL and e. LA.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis corniculataCreeping Lady's-sorrelGardens, fields, disturbed areas, sometimes more natural areas including pinelands, dunes.Probably native of New World tropics and subtropics, possibly including the deeper South. Now nearly worldwide in distribution. Many reports and records appear to meimage of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis debilisDisturbed areas.Native of South America.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis dichondrifoliaAgritoChaparral, dunes.S. TX south into Mexico (COA, NLE, SLP, TAM, VER).
OxalidaceaeOxalis dilleniiSouthern Yellow Wood-sorrelRoadsides, pastures, lawns, a wide variety of other habitats.NS west to SK, south to FL, TX, NM; introduced elsewhere.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis drummondiiDrummond's Wood-sorrelPrairies, post oak woodlands.Nc. TX south through s. TX and w. TX to Mexico (COA, NLE, SLP, TAM).
OxalidaceaeOxalis floridaFloodplain forests, moist fields, ditches, bluffs, and moist slopes.VT and CT south to FL, west to LA, AR, and MO.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis frutescens ssp. angustifoliaShrubby Wood-sorrelSandy soils of live oak copses.S. TX south into Mexico, Central America, and South America.
OxalidaceaeOxalis grandisGreat Yellow Wood-sorrelRich moist forests, rocky bluffs.PA, OH, and IN, south to SC, GA, AL, MS.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis hispidulaLawns, wet ditches, disturbed roadsides.Native of Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Brazil. See Horne, Barger, & Nesom (2013) and Franck et al. (2016) for additional and more detailed information. Also abundant in lawns in Monroe, LA (Ouachita Parish). Kelley & Vincent (2020) report naturalization in multiple areas in Louisiana.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis illinoensisIllinois Wood-sorrelDry to dry-mesic forests and bluffs, often but not necessarily calcareous.S. IN and s. IL south through KY to c. TN.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis intermediaWest Indian Wood-sorrel, Cuban Purple Wood-sorrelDisturbed areas.FL west to CA, south into the New World tropics; West Indies.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis macranthaSadie Price’s Yellow Wood-sorrelRich woodlands.KY and TN south to GA, Panhandle FL, AL, MS, and se. LA; disjunct in c. NCimage of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis montanaAmerican Wood-sorrel, White Wood-sorrel, Forest ShamrockSpruce-fir forests, northern hardwood forests, restricted to high elevations southwards.QC and NY west to SK, south to GA, NC, and TN.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis pes-capraeDisturbed areas.Native of Africa. Reported for Mobile County, AL (Barger et al. 2023).
OxalidaceaeOxalis species 1Asynchronous Violet Wood-sorrelLongleaf pine sandhills, Altamaha grit glades.S. GA and adjacent FL, and apparently more widespread, as in e. TX and s. AR.
OxalidaceaeOxalis strictaCommon Yellow Wood-sorrelDisturbed areas, also in a variety of natural habitats.Widespread in North America south to n. Mexico, now widespread nearly worldwide.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis texanaTexas Wood-sorrelGlades, woodlands, forests.Panhandle FL and AL west to TX.image of plant
OxalidaceaeOxalis triangularisPurple ShamrockDisturbed areas.Native of Brazil and Argentina. See Serviss, Hardage, & Peck (2021) for discussion of marginal naturalization in AR.
OxalidaceaeOxalis violaceaViolet Wood-sorrelDry to moist forests.MA, VT, MI, SD, and CO south to FL, TX, and AZ.image of plant

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