Vascular Plants of North Carolina
Account for South American Skullcap - Scutellaria racemosa   Persoon
Members of Lamiaceae:
Members of Scutellaria with account distribution info or public map:
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Section 6 » Order Lamiales » Family Lamiaceae
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AuthorPersoon
DistributionScattered in the Piedmont and Coastal Plain, and in 2020 (Facebook photo) from the southern coast (New Hanover County). First collected in 2000 as a nursery weed in Chatham County, then in 2001 in landscaping material in a yard in Mecklenburg County; subsequently in 2006, 2007, 2016, and 2020. Spreading greatly, with many iNaturalist photos in 2023-24.

Native of South America; in N.A. NC to FL, TX, AR.
AbundanceRare but increasing, so far as is known. It probably is overlooked -- it is a tiny species, but is starting to spread in the state.
HabitatCampus plant beds, yard weed where augmented with landscape material, lawn weed. Various weedy places with low vegetation.
PhenologyFlowering and fruiting April-January.
IdentificationThis skullcap is very branchy and its stems are lax, tending to form patches; it ranges only to a few inches tall, seldom a foot tall. The leaves are lance-shape or narrowly triangular, with 2 small but distinct basal lobes -- a key character. The flowers are tiny, in leaf axils, pink-rose and white, with dark red or purple spotting on the lower lip.
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Global RankGNR
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B.A. SorrieSandhills Community College, weed in plant bed, Oct 2016. MoorePhoto_non_natural
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