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Long Hollow, Beaman Park, Davidson County, Tennessee, US
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MmakiUrticaceae (Nettle family)Endemic to the Hawaiian IslandsHawaii Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii IslandGreen fruits.Dried or fresh leaves are used to make a mild but invigorating and healthy tea and one few commercially available native herbs for consumption. Ripe whitish fruits are bland but edible. Mmaki has been used since the early Hawaiians.
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Pipturus_albidus
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Parque Estadual da Serra do Mar ncleo Carlos Botelho, SP, Brasil
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Tarana, New South Wales, Australia
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This species is a seasonal flood specialist and appears to use the river and fish to disperse its seeds.
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Long Hollow, Beaman Park, Davidson County, Tennessee, US
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Ranging from Mexico to southeastern Brazil. Photo from northern Nicaragua.
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Tarana, New South Wales, Australia
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Long Hollow, Beaman Park, Davidson County, Tennessee, US
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Barnett's Woods State Natural Area, Montgomery County, Tennessee, US
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Cabo, Pernambuco, Brazil
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MmakiUrticaceae (Nettle family)Endemic to the Hawaiian IslandsHawaii Volcanoes National Park, Hawaii IslandDried or fresh leaves are used to make a mild but invigorating and healthy tea and one few commercially available native herbs for consumption. Ripe whitish fruits are bland but edible. Mmaki has been used since the early Hawaiians.
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Pipturus_albidus
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Tarana, New South Wales, Australia
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A medicinal nettle of the Neotropics. Photo from Omaere Ethnobotanical Gardens, Puyo, Ecuador.
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Barnett's Woods State Natural Area, Montgomery County, Tennessee, US
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MmakiUrticaceae (Nettle family)Endemic to the Hawaiian IslandsOahu (Cultivated)Dried or fresh leaves are used to make a mild but invigorating and healthy tea and one few commercially available native herbs for consumption. Ripe whitish fruits are bland but edible. Mmaki has been used since the early Hawaiians.NPH 00011
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Pipturus_albidus
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Barnett's Woods State Natural Area, Montgomery County, Tennessee, US
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MmakiUrticaceae (Nettle family)Endemic to the Hawaiian IslandsMaui (Cultivated)Dried or fresh leaves are used to make a mild but invigorating and healthy tea and one few commercially available native herbs for consumption. Ripe whitish fruits are bland but edible. Mmaki has been used since the early Hawaiians.NPH 00008
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Pipturus_albidus
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Barnett's Woods State Natural Area, Montgomery County, Tennessee, US
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Trilium Gap Trail, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Sevier County, Tennessee, US
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MmakiUrticaceae (Nettle family)Endemic to the Hawaiian Islands (All the main islands except Niihau and Kahoolawe)Oahu (Cultivated)Dried or fresh leaves are used to make a mild but invigorating and healthy tea and one few commercially available native herbs for consumption. Ripe whitish fruits are bland but edible. Mmaki has been used since the early Hawaiians.EtymologyThe generic name Pipturus is derived from the Greek pipto, to fall, and oura, tail, in reference to the caducous stigma.The specific epithet albidis is Latin for white.NPH 00007
nativeplants.hawaii.edu/plant/view/Pipturus_albidus
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Trilium Gap Trail, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Sevier County, Tennessee, US