Base de datos de plantas del FNPS

Baccharis dioica

broombush falsewillow
  • Photo by: Shirley Denton, Suncoast Chapter FNPS

Nomenclatura

Nombre común:

broombush falsewillow

Sinónimo(s):

Especie del género:

Baccharis dioica

Familia:

Asteraceae (Compositae)

Especificaciones de la planta

Forma:

shrub

Tamaño:

3-6 (10) ft

Esperanza de vida:

Long-lived perennial

Color de la flor:

white,yellow

Color de la fruta:

white

Fenología:

Fall bloomer

Destacado por:

Paisajismo

Usos recomendados:

Where a moderate-sized shrub is wanted.

Consideraciones:

Disponibilidad:

Propagación:

Cuttings

Luz:

Tolerancia a la humedad:

Siempre inundado---------------------------------Extremadamente seco

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Not wet but not extremely dry -a- Very long very dry periods

Tolerancia a inundaciones por agua salada:

Unknown

Tolerancia a la niebla salina/suelo salado:

High. Can tolerate significant and ongoing amounts of salt.

Suelo u otro sustrato:

pH del suelo:

Calcareous (high pH)

Apto para cultivo en:

Las zonas del USDA se basan en la temperatura mínima extrema invernal anual promedio.

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Acreditado en:

Distribution
Vouchered
Not vouchered
Selected
Click a county The county name will appear here.
No county distribution is available for this plant yet.
Starting…
Map coded by Melissa Fernandez-de Cespedes (Paynes Prairie Chapter)

Ecología

Fauna:

Butterflies

Nectar attracts  butterflies.  

Hábitats nativos:

Coastal areas. Dunes and limerock and said to like hollows near mangroves.

Área de distribución natural en Florida:

Comentarios:

Etnobotánica:

Comentarios generales:

This plant is believed to be extirpated in the wild in Florida.  According to most sources, it was known from a single area south of Miami near Biscayne Bay.  Old specimens at the University of Florida Herbarium for Escambia and Okaloosa counties were re-examined in 2006 and re-identified as Baccacharis dioica.  It has also been reported to have been found on a dune near Mobile, AL (Woodlanders, Inc.) and introduced into the nursery trade from there.  The map of herbarium speciment locations on the Florida Plant Atlas have not been updated. 



Plants commercially available in FL apparently come from imports from the Bahamas.  

FNPS Plant Print

Citas:

Gann, G.D., C.J. Abbott, C.G. Stocking, K.N. Hines, and collaborators. (2001+). Hammock groundsel, Broombush Falsewillow. Natives For Your Neighborhood. ( https://www.regionalconservation.org/beta/nfyn/plantdetail.asp?tx=Baccdioi ). Accessed 2025. The Institute for Regional Conservation. Delray Beach, Florida.


Global Biodiversity Information Facility. (Undated). Baccharis dioica Vahl. ( https://www.gbif.org/species/3129751 ). Accessed 2025.


Woodlanders, Inc. (Undated). Product description: Baccharis dioica. ( https://woodlanders.net/products/baccharis-dioica ). Accessed 2025.


Wunderlin, R. P., B. F. Hansen, A. R. Franck, and F. B. Essig. (1999+). Atlas of Florida Plants. ( https://florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/ ). [S. M. Landry and K. N. Campbell (application development), USF Water Institute.] Institute for Systematic Botany, University of South Florida, Tampa.

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