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Botanisk Have Århus
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Norfolk, Virginia, United States
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Galley Hill, Bexhill on Sea.
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Tamarix chinensis Lour. (syn. T. ramosissima) is a Utah Class C state noxious weed and is the subject of significant and continual eradication efforts.The flowers are 5-merous (although, that is difficult to discern above). The shrubs/trees typically continue to produce a multitude of small flowers throughout the summer and into the fall leading to copious amounts of seed.Common names include Tamarisk, Saltcedar, Chinese Tamarisk and Five-stamen Tamarisk.August 4, 2012, along the Jordan River, mid-valley, Salt Lake County, Utah
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Oct 18, 2009Tucson Arizona banks of Santa Cruz River
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Tamarix canariensis Willd.TAMARICACEAELocal: Siclia, Itlia.
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Norfolk, Virginia, United States
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Castello D'Empuries, Catalonia, Spain
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Tamarix canariensis Willd.TAMARICACEAELocal: Siclia, Itlia.
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Castello D'Empuries, Catalonia, Spain
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Evin-Malmaison, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France
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naturalized trees in deep sandy soils along the river. Easily identified by the multitude of long, fine, drooping, jointed branchlets that resemble pine needles. Actual leaves are reduced to tiny (1-2mm) scales sheathing these green stems. Least invasive of the noxious 'Saltcedars' that plague riparian habitats across the west.
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naturalized trees in deep sandy soils along the river. Easily identified by the multitude of long, fine, drooping, jointed branchlets that resemble pine needles. Actual leaves are reduced to tiny (1-2mm) scales sheathing these green stems. Least invasive of the noxious 'Saltcedars' that plague riparian habitats across the west.
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naturalized trees in deep sandy soils along the river. Easily identified by the multitude of long, fine, drooping, jointed branchlets that resemble pine needles. Actual leaves are reduced to tiny (1-2mm) scales sheathing these green stems. Least invasive of the noxious 'Saltcedars' that plague riparian habitats across the west.
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