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Oxalis dillenii, the southern wood-sorrel, [2] slender yellow woodsorrel, or Dillen's oxalis, [3] is a species in the woodsorrel family. Like other Oxalis species, the leaves of this plant resemble clover leaves, with three leaflets. Oxalis dillenii can be confused with other small yellow flowered species in North America, such as Oxalis ...
Oxalis stricta, called the common yellow woodsorrel (or simply yellow woodsorrel), common yellow oxalis, upright yellow-sorrel, lemon clover, ...
Oxalis decaphylla – ten-leaved pink-sorrel, tenleaf wood sorrel; Oxalis dehradunensis; Oxalis depressa; Oxalis dichondrifolia – peonyleaf wood sorrel; Oxalis dillenii Jacquin – southern yellow woodsorrel, Dillen's woodsorrel, Sussex yellow-sorrel; Oxalis drummondii – Drummond's woodsorrel, chevron oxalis; Oxalis ecuadorensis
Yellow woodsorrel may refer to any member of the woodsorrel genus with yellow flowers (also called "yellow-sorrels"), but especially: Oxalis corniculata (creeping woodsorrel), a low-lying species Oxalis dillenii (southern yellow woodsorrel), an erect species with hairy fruits
Oxalis grandis, commonly known as great yellow woodsorrel or large yellow wood sorrel, [3] is an annual plant and herb in the woodsorrel family. It is native to the eastern United States from Georgia north to Pennsylvania and Wisconsin , west as far as Louisiana .
Oxalis corniculata, the creeping woodsorrel, procumbent yellow sorrel [2] or sleeping beauty, is a somewhat delicate-appearing, low-growing herbaceous plant in the family Oxalidaceae. It is a small creeping type of woodsorrel that tends to grow well in moist climates. [3] It resembles the common yellow woodsorrel, Oxalis stricta.
The Oxalidaceae, or wood sorrel family, are a small family of five genera of herbaceous plants, shrubs and small trees, with the great majority of the 570 species [2] in the genus Oxalis (wood sorrels).
Oxalis suksdorfii is a species of flowering plant in the woodsorrel family known by the common name western yellow woodsorrel and Suksdorf's woodsorrel.It is native to the western coast of the United States from Washington to northern California, where it can be found in open and wooded habitat types.