Nomenclature

Common Name:

broombush falsewillow

Synonym(s):

Genus species:

Baccharis dioica

Family:

Asteraceae (Compositae)

Plant Specifics

Form:

shrub

Size:

3-6 (10) ft

Life Span:

Long-lived perennial

Flower Color:

white,yellow

Fruit Color:

white

Phenology:

Fall bloomer

Noted For:

Landscaping

Recommended Uses:

Where a moderate-sized shrub is wanted.

Considerations:

Availability:

Propagation:

Cuttings

Light:

Moisture Tolerance:

Always Flooded------------------------------------------------Extremely Dry

Coming Soon!

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

Salt Water Flooding Tolerance:

Unknown

Salt Spray/Salty Soil Tolerance:

High. Can tolerate significant and ongoing amounts of salt.

Soil or Other Substrate:

Soil pH:

Calcareous (high pH)

Suitable to Grow In:

Ecology

Wildlife:

Butterflies

Nectar attracts  butterflies.  

Native Habitats:

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

Natural Range in Florida:

Comments:

Ethnobotany:

General Comments:

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.