| Southern club-moss
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| Lycopodiella appressa
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| Lycopodiaceae
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Landscape Uses:
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Primarily recommended for natural landscapes and habitat restorations. |
Ecological Restoration Notes: |
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| Availability: |
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Grown by enthusiasts. |
| Description: |
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Small to medium herbaceous fern relative. |
| Height: |
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About 6-18 inches in height. Stems creep along the ground forming large patches broader than tall. |
| Growth Rate: |
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Moderate. |
| Range: |
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Widespread in eastern and central North America west to Texas and south to Miami-Dade and Collier counties. Presumed extirpated in Miami-Dade County; perhaps extirpated in Broward County; Cuba. |
| Habitats: |
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Wet pinelands, prairies and margins of swamps. |
| Soils: |
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Wet to moist, poorly drained acid sandy soils, sometimes with some peat accumulation. |
| Nutritional Requirements: |
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Low; it grows in nutrient poor soils. |
| Salt Water Tolerance: |
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Low; does not tolerate flooding by salt or brackish water. |
| Salt Wind Tolerance: |
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Low; salt wind may burn the leaves. |
| Drought Tolerance: |
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Low; requires moist to wet soils and is intolerant of long periods of drought. |
| Light Requirements: |
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Full sun. |
| Flower Color: |
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N/A. |
| Flower Characteristics: |
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There are no flowers; the plants reproduce by spores. |
| Flowering Season: |
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Fall. |
| Fruit: |
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Inconspicuous spores. |
| Wildlife and Ecology: |
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| Horticultural Notes: |
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Can be grown from spores. |
| Comments: |
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