Dataset: PIHG
Taxa: Pereskia
Search Criteria: excluding cultivated/captive occurrences

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Page 1, records 1-8 of 8

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


PIHG
4190Kenneth R. Langdon   7221967-10-19
United States, Florida, Alachua, Potted plant, DPI greenhouse, Archer Rd. Laboratory. Plant collected previously growing on bank at e. edge of Reitz Union pond before construction

PIHG
4191F.L. Ware   PI-14141970-05-27
United States, Florida, Orange, Thorny, succulent bush. Green Thumb Nursery

PIHG
11301Ellen J. Tannehill   2012-08-08
United States, Florida, Palm Beach, 52 West Atlantic Avenue, Sec 17 R46S R43E.

PIHG
11644Marc S. Frank   2013-04-09
United States, Florida, Duval, University of North Florida. Cultivated in campus landscape.

PIHG
13067Marc S. Frank   12202016-01-31
United States, Florida, Collier, Naples Bot. Garden, 4820 Bayshore Dr. Thorny vine, 7 ft across, sprawling on ground, rooting at nodes.Trunk woody, 1.5 ft tall w/ spines in clusters. Flw buds yellowish. Fruit globose, golden-orange. Cult. in bot. gard. landscape. Barbados gooseberry

PIHG
13378Miguel L. Justiz   2018-03-29
United States, Florida, Miami-Dade, 29441 SW 157th Court. 25.4927°N, -80.4454°W. Collected from home garden. Fruit orange. B2018-214.

PIHG
14902   2020-09-01
United States, Florida, Highlands, 3057 W Remsen Rd. 27.6335, -81.5546. Growing in residential landscape, possibly escaped from next door neighbor with many cultivated plants. Shrub or tree. Spines 1-6 per areole, straight, dark gray. Leaves succulent, glabrous. Fruit a fleshy berry, indehiscent, obovoid. Seeds black. B2020-360.

PIHG
14903   2020-09-01
United States, Florida, Highlands, 3057 W Remsen Rd. 27.6335, -81.5546. Growing in residential landscape, possibly escaped from next door neighbor with many cultivated plants. Shrub or tree. Spines 1-6 per areole, straight, dark gray. Leaves succulent, glabrous. Fruit a fleshy berry, indehiscent, obovoid. Seeds black. B2020-360.


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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.