Page 43: 472 results for get a
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Lonicera sempervirens (trumpet honeysuckle)
...rights-of-way. Most collections of this plant are clearly introduced (intentionally or unintentionally) and many that are away from homes and farms are located on tracts of land surrounded by urban an...
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Poa trivialis (rough-sheathed blue grass)
...such as springs and stream shores. It gets its common name from the fact that the sheaths (the base of the leaf that wraps the stem) are sandpapery. Habitat: floodplain (river or stream floodplains...
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Aronia melanocarpa (black chokeberry)
... Aronia arbutifolia. This nothospecies is nearly glabrous in the inflorescence, along new branchlets, and on abaxial leaf surfaces and it has a black pome. Native to North America? ...
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Rhus hirta (staghorn sumac)
...occasionally burrow into the stems. Caterpillars of many moths and butterflies eat the foliage. Habitat: anthropogenic (man-made or disturbed habitats), forest edges, meadows and fields All Cha...
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Chelone lyonii (pink turtlehead)
...Placenta arrangement: the plant has axile placentation, in which the ovules are attached where the septa of a compound ovary are united, usually on the central axis, or to th...
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Dirca palustris (eastern leatherwood)
...Leaf blade vein pattern: the main veins of the leaf blade are pinnate (the secondary veins branch off at intervals from the main central vein) and non-arcuate (not arched tow...
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Ribes rubrum (garden red currant)
...will get them! Habitat: anthropogenic (man-made or disturbed habitats), floodplain (river or stream floodplains), forest edges, meadows and fields All Characteristics: Specific habitat...
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Ulmus rubra (slippery elm)
...marginal cilia and lacking hairs over body of seed (vs. U. rubra, with leaf blade with usually 2 or more lateral veins forking well before reaching margin and wing of fruit lacking marginal cilia and ...
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Phlox pilosa (downy phlox)
...decumbent at base, whereas the sterile, basal offshoots are prostrate and rooting (vs. P. pilosa, with leaf blades linear to lanceolate or narrow-ovate, tapering to a sharp, indurate awn-tip 0.5–3 mm ...
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Carex radiata (eastern star sedge)
...probably gets its name from its star-like inflorescenses. It is most similar to, and easily confused with, Appalachian sedge (Carex appalachica) and rosy sedge (C. rosea). Habitat: forests All ...