OF THE CAROLINAS & GEORGIA

Hovering over an image will enlarge it and point out features (works better on desktop than on mobile).

camera icon A camera indicates there are pictures.
speaker icon A speaker indicates that a botanical name is pronounced.
plus sign icon A plus sign after a Latin name indicates that the species is further divided into varieties or subspecies.

Most habitat and range descriptions were obtained from Weakley's Flora.

Your search found 2 taxa in the family Cannabaceae, Hops family, as understood by PLANTS National Database.

arrow

range map

camera icon Common Name: Japanese Hops

Weakley's Flora: (4/14/23) Humulus scandens   FAMILY: Cannabaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH PLANTS National Database: Humulus japonicus   FAMILY: Cannabaceae

SYNONYMOUS WITH Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968): Humulus japonicus 058-01-002   FAMILY: Cannabaceae

 

Habitat: Disturbed areas, particularly in rich, alluvial soils, where it has become a serious weed along some rivers in our region

Common in NC Piedmont (rare elsewhere in GA-NC-SC)

Non-native: Japan, Taiwan, & China

 


drawing of Cannabis sativa, Marijuana, Hemp need picture of Cannabis sativa, Marijuana, Hemp need picture Cannabis sativa, Marijuana, Hemp need picture of Cannabis sativa, Marijuana, Hemp need picture of Cannabis sativa, Marijuana, Hemp
range map

Common Name: Marijuana, Hemp

Weakley's Flora: (4/14/23) Cannabis sativa   FAMILY: Cannabaceae

INCLUDING PLANTS National Database: Cannabis sativa ssp. sativa var. sativa   FAMILY: Cannabaceae

 

Habitat: Disturbed areas and clandestinely cultivated plots

Waif(s)

Non-native: Asia

 


Your search found 2 taxa. You are on page PAGE 1 out of 1 pages.


"The claims of certain so-called scientific men as to 'science overthrowing religion' are as baseless as the fears of certain sincerely religious men on the same subject. The establishment of the doctrine of evolution in our time offers no more justification for upsetting religious beliefs than the discovery of the facts concerning the solar system a few centuries ago. Any faith sufficiently robust to stand the — surely very slight — strain of admitting that the world is not flat and does not move round the sun need have no apprehensions on the score of evolution, and the materialistic scientists who gleefully hail the discovery of the principle of evolution as establishing their dreary creed might with just as much propriety rest it upon the discovery of the principle of gravity." — Theodore Roosevelt