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 Saururaceae, Lizard's-tail family, as understood by PLANTS National Database.

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camera icon speaker icon Common Name: Lizard's-tail, Water-dragon

Weakley's Flora: (4/24/22) Saururus cernuus   FAMILY: Saururaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH PLANTS National Database: Saururus cernuus   FAMILY: Saururaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968): Saururus cernuus 050-01-001   FAMILY: Saururaceae

 

Habitat: Swamps, overwash pools in stream floodplains, freshwater and oligohaline tidal marshes, semipermanently inundated rocky bars and shores, beaver ponds, ditches, usually where water ponds seasonally or periodically. In swamps of the Coastal Plain, Saururus often is dominant in large patches

Common (rare in Mountains)

Native to the Carolinas & Georgia

 


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camera icon Common Name: Fishmint, Chameleon-plant, Fishleaf

Weakley's Flora: (4/14/23) Houttuynia cordata   FAMILY: Saururaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH PLANTS National Database: Houttuynia cordata   FAMILY: Saururaceae

 

Habitat: Disturbed areas, moist suburban forests, ditches, spread from cultivation

Waif(s)

Non-native: east Asia

 


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"Despite what developers will tell you about restoration, she said, once a piece of land is graded, the biologic organisms and understructure of the soil are destroyed. 'No one knows how to easily re-create that, short of years of hand-weeding. Leaving land alone doesn't work; the natives are overwhelmed by the invaders.' Spot bulldozing is common... even on land that is supposedly protected. 'Much of this destruction is done out of expediency and ignorance.' She believed people are unlikely to value what they cannot name." — Richard Louv, Last Child in the Woods, quoting biologist Elaine Brooks