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Phyla nodiflora (L.) Greene  
Family: Verbenaceae
turkey tangle fogfruit, more...Turkey-Tangle, frog fruit, sawtooth fogfruit, turkey tangle
[Lippia canescens Kunth, moreLippia incisa (Small) Tidestrom, Lippia nodiflora (L.) Michx., Lippia nodiflora var. acutifolia , Lippia nodiflora var. canescens (Kunth) Kuntze, Lippia nodiflora var. nodiflora , Lippia nodiflora var. reptans (Kunth) Kuntze, Lippia nodiflora var. rosea (D. Don) Munz, Lippia reptans Kunth, Phyla incisa Small, Phyla nodiflora var. antillana Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. canescens (Kunth) Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. incisa (Small) Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. longifolia Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. nodiflora (L.) Greene, Phyla nodiflora var. repens (Spreng.) Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. reptans (Kunth) Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. rosea (D. Don) Moldenke, Phyla nodiflora var. texensis Moldenke]
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  • SW Field Guide
  • Gleason & Cronquist
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Correll and Johnston 1970, Allred and Ivey 2012, Martin and Hutchins 1980, Heil et al. 2013
Duration: Perennial Nativity: Non-native Lifeform: Forb/Herb General: Creeping, mat-forming perennial herb, 5-15 cm tall; stems decumbent and trailing along the ground, to 90 cm long, rooting at the nodes. Leaves: Opposite along the stems; blades spatulate to obovate, mostly about 2 cm long and 1 cm wide, thick-textured, sharply and regulary serrate near the apex and wedge-shaped at the base, usually tapering into a short petiole; leaf surfaces glabrous or strigollose-puberulent. Flowers: Tiny but attractive and purple, tightly clustered in dense globose to cylindric spikes, 2 cm tall; spikes located at the tips of ascending axillary peduncles which are longer than the leaves; each flower subtended by a cuneate-obovate bractlet; corolla bell-shaped, 5-lobed, and obscurely 2-lipped, 2-3 mm long, slightly longer than the subtending bractlet, purple to rose or occasionally white, often with a yellow center. Fruits: Nutlets 2 per flower, enclosed in the persistent calyx. Ecology: Found in moist, typically disturbed soils, from 3,000-6,500 ft; flowers March-September. Distribution: Native to S. Amer.; introduced to w N. Amer. from MO and CO to s CA, south to MEX. Notes: This weedy perennial can often be found on roadsides, along railroad tracks, and other similarly disturbed locations. The stems trail along the ground and root at the nodes; the pairs of wedge-shaped leaves have rounded tips lined with small, regularly-spaced teeth; and the tiny purple-and-white flowers are clustered in small heads at the ends of flower stalks that ascend above the leaves. P. cuneifolia is similar but has narrower, lanceolate leaves with a few larger, irregularly spaced teeth near the tips; also in that species the bracts that subtend each flower are larger, 5 mm long and 3 mm wide, with an abruptly pointed tip that curls backward at maturity. Ethnobotany: The Houma tribe of Louisiana used a decoction of the plant as a wash to make weak, lazy babies walk. Etymology: Phyla is from the Greek word phyle, clan or tribe, alluding to the many flowers per spike; nodiflora means flowers from the nodes.  Synonyms: Lippia nodiflora, Zappania nodiflora Editor: AHazelton 2017
Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Much like no. 1 [Phyla lanceolata (Michx.) Greene], but the lvs spatulate to obovate or elliptic-obovate, generally broadest a little above the middle, mostly rounded or obtuse at the tip and narrowed to a cuneiform, petiolar or subpetiolar base, often toothed only above the middle; 2n=36. Moist soil in many habitats, especially in disturbed sites; pantropical, n. in Amer. to Va. and Calif., rarely further. May-Oct. (Lippia n.)

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.
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Open Interactive Map
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Liz Makings
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Liz Makings
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Liz Makings
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Sue Carnahan
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Stephen Hale
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Sue Carnahan
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Stephen Hale
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
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Patrick Alexander
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Patrick Alexander
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Sue Carnahan
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Patrick Alexander
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Patrick Alexander
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Patrick Alexander
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
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Sue Carnahan
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University of Florida Herbarium
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University of Florida Herbarium
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University of Florida Herbarium
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University of Florida Herbarium
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University of Florida Herbarium
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Liz Makings
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