Dataset: PIHG
Taxa: corchorus => Corchorus aestuans, Corchorus
Search Criteria: excluding cultivated/captive occurrences

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Page 1, records 1-6 of 6

Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Plant Industry


PIHG
10547Olga Garcia   2008-06-02
United States, Florida, Miami-Dade, Miami: Dirt road; 5 miles S of SW 390 Street & SW 232 Avenue. Shrub, 2 m tall; flowers small, yellow, many seed pods. slippery burr

PIHG
10689Richard E. Weaver, Jr.,with Yen Dao & Susan Halbert   52352009-07-27
United States, Florida, Alachua, Gainesville: Museum Road, University of Florida student gardens, near bat house. Rare weedy annual, just starting to bloom. Corolla bright yellow. jute

PIHG
10690Richard E. Weaver, Jr.   52512009-09-10
United States, Florida, Alachua, Micanopy: Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park, 100 Savannah Blvd, near boardwalk on US Highway 441. Common annual herb in moist soil; corolla pale yellow. jute

PIHG
11185Lisa M. Hassell   2012-09-04
United States, Florida, Duval, The Garden at Jackson Square, 2554 Phillips Highway.

PIHG
11749UF Plant Pathology Greenhouses   2014-04-11
United States, Florida, Alachua, University of Florida Plant Pathology Greenhouses, Mowry Road. Cultivated from seed.

PIHG
14795Alexander de la Paz   5012019-09-16
United States, Florida, Alachua, University of Florida campus, University Gardens, S of Museum Rd, E of Lake Alice, W of Lake Alice Field. 29°38'40.1"N 82°21'30.2"W. Floodplain forest/bottomland forest ecotone adjacent to Lake Alice. Annual herb, ca. 40 cm. Petals 5, yellow. Flowers subsessile. Fruit a loculicidal capsule, narrowly oblong, angular, winged.


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Page 1, records 1-6 of 6


Google Map

Google Maps is a web mapping service provided by Google that features a map that users can pan (by dragging the mouse) and zoom (by using the mouse wheel). Collection points are displayed as colored markers that when clicked on, displays the full information for that collection. When multiple species are queried (separated by semi-colons), different colored markers denote each individual species.

Google Earth (KML)

This creates an KML file that can be opened in the Google Earth mapping application. Note that you must have Google Earth installed on your computer to make use of this option.