OF THE CAROLINAS & GEORGIA

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Most habitat and range descriptions were obtained from Weakley's Flora.

Your search found 2 taxa in the family Cleomaceae, Cleome family, as understood by Weakley's Flora.

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camera icon Common Name: Cleome, Spiderflower, Pinkqueen

Weakley's Flora: (4/24/22) Tarenaya species 1   FAMILY: Cleomaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH PLANTS National Database: Cleome hassleriana   FAMILY: Capparaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH (MISAPPLIED) Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968): Cleome houtteana 087-01-001   FAMILY: Capparaceae

 

Habitat: Gardens, disturbed areas, sandbars, riverbanks, persistent and self-seeding from cultivation as an ornamental

Uncommon in SC Coastal Plain (rare elsewhere in GA-NC-SC)

Non-native: South America

 


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Common Name: Cleome, Fringed Spiderflower

Weakley's Flora: (4/14/23) Cleome rutidosperma   FAMILY: Cleomaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH PLANTS National Database: Cleome rutidosperma   FAMILY: Capparaceae

 

Habitat: Disturbed areas

Non-native: tropical Asia & Africa

 


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"Invasive exotics share several strong traits: fit well within the environment, grow rapidly, mature to produce flowers and seed at an early age, produce great quantities of seed, effectively disperse their seed (via birds, etc.), rampantly spread vegetatively, have no major pest of disease problems. Horticulturally, some of these characteristics are considered quite desirable. Thus there is the absurd irony of various governmental and environmental groups trying hard to control and eradicate in the wild some of the very same species being sold to gardeners all over the US...." — Margie Hunter, Gardening with the Native Plants of Tennessee