Diospyros virginiana L.

  • Filed As

    Ebenaceae
    Diospyros virginiana L.

  • Collector(s)

    J. E. Dorey 529, 27 May 2015

  • Location

    United States of America. Maryland. Wicomico Co. Chesapeake Forest Lands, Stump Gut Ecologically Sensitive Area, terminus of Tyler Trail, E shore of Marshyhope Creek, Stump Gut, 0.37 mi from the E shore of the Nanticoke River, 0.5 mi NW of entrance on Old Bradley Rd.

  • Habitat

    Open swamp forest of Chamaecyparis and mixed hardwoods (Acer, Nyssa, Ilex, and Magnolia virginiana) with abundant Phragmitis in places.

  • Identifiers

    NY Barcode: 03217606

    Occurrence ID: 123cc460-57a5-413b-a20a-5a87d2e77175

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  • Kingdom

    Plantae

  • Division

    Magnoliophyta

  • Order

    Ericales

  • Family

    Ebenaceae

  • All Determinations

    Diospyros virginiana L.

  • Region

    North America

  • Country

    United States of America

  • State/Province

    Maryland

  • County/Municipio

    Wicomico Co.

  • Locality

    Chesapeake Forest Lands, Stump Gut Ecologically Sensitive Area, terminus of Tyler Trail, E shore of Marshyhope Creek, Stump Gut, 0.37 mi from the E shore of the Nanticoke River, 0.5 mi NW of entrance on Old Bradley Rd.

  • Coordinates

    38.4858, -75.7931

  • Distribution

    Map all specimens of this taxon

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BOTANICAL
NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN
03217606
Plants of MARYLAND, U.S.A.
Diospyros virginiana L.
WICOMICO CO.: Chesapeake Forest Lands, Stump Gut
Ecologically Sensitive Area, terminus of Tyler Trail, E shore
of Marshyhope Creek, Stump Gut, 0.37 mi from the E shore
of the Nanticoke River, 0.5 mi NW of entrance on Old
Bradley Rd. 38.48583°N, 75.79306°W
Open swamp forest of Chamaecyparis and mixed hardwoods
(Acer, Nyssa, Ilex, and Magnolia virginiana) with abundant
Phragmites in places.
J.E. Dorey 529	27	May	2015
NEW YORK BOTANICAL GARDEN (NY)
Voucher specimen for:
Dorey, JE, Lendemer, JC & Naczi, RFC (2017). Patterns of biodiverse,
understudied groups do not mirror those of the surrogate groups that set
conservation priorities: a case study from the Mid-Atlantic Coastal Plain of
eastern North America. Biodivers Conserv DOI: 10.1007/sl0531-017-1420-y
03217606