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Bocas del Toro, Panama
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The large size and smooth trunk make this species ideal to protect hives of Apis Dorsata, the giant asian honeybee. Photo from central Sumatra.
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A widespread species from eastern Africa. Photo from southern Mexico. Known in English as the Canarybird Bush.
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Waterfall, New South Wales, Australia
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Washington, District of Columbia, United States
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Endemic to the western lowlands of Ecuador. Jatun Sacha Gardens. Caesalpinoid.
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Cassia javanica from Caesalpiniaceae
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Alcornocales N.P., Andalucia, Spain
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This is a dainty shrub, slender, trailing and twining with tiny flowers. It grows in wet areas such as creek lines. It often grows up among other plants. Here it is growing in a damp area and is returning after a burn. It flowers between October and December. Photo: Jean
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Family: FabaceaeDistribution: Common in waste places. Found in Tropical Africa, India and Mauritius.Photographed at Nellore.0.5to 1m tall herbs, branches villous,. Leaves 3-8cm long, imparipinnate; leaflets 11-15,0.5-1.8x0.3-0.8cm, oblong, emarginate and mucronate base cuneate, silky beneath. Flowers 0.8-1cm long, pink, fascicled on 4-10cm long leaf-opposed or terminal racemes. Pods2-4x0.2-0.5cm, linear, wooly, linear oblong 6-9 seeded.
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This Lord Howe Island endemic tree is related to the Hawaiian Mamane (Sophora chrysophylla) and other insular endemics in the Edwardsia section of Sophora (Fabaceae). This one grew from a seed from Lord Howe Island and flowers in a tub in my yard most years in January/February. Image I10-5843
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Gundaroo, New South Wales, Australia
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Audley, New South Wales, Australia
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Audley, New South Wales, Australia
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A woody vine native to the Neotropics, but planted more widely as forage and for nitrogen fixation. Photo is of a weed in Copalita Park, southwestern Mexico.
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Camaragibe, Pernambuco, Brazil
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