|                    Pineland-allamanda, Pineland golden trumpet
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                |                    Angadenia berteroi  
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                |                    Apocynaceae 
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                 Landscape Uses:
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                 Wildflower and rock gardens. | 
               
                Ecological Restoration Notes:  | 
               
              
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                 It can be used as one of many understory herbs in pine rocklands. | 
               
              
                | Availability: | 
               
              
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                 Grown by enthusiasts. | 
               
              
                | Description: | 
               
              
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                 Small to medium erect wildflower. | 
               
              
                | Height: | 
               
              
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                 About 6-18 inches in height, sometimes taller, or vine-like to 3 feet in length.  Taller than broad. | 
               
              
                | Growth Rate: | 
               
              
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                 Slow. | 
               
              
                | Range: | 
               
              
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                 Monroe County Keys and Miami-Dade and Collier counties; West Indies.  In the Monroe County Keys, disjunct from Miami-Dade County to the pine rocklands of Big Pine Key and nearby islands. | 
               
              
                | Habitats: | 
               
              
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                 Pinelands and marl prairies. | 
               
              
                | Soils: | 
               
              
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                 Moist, well-drained limestone or sandy soils, without humus. | 
               
              
                | Nutritional Requirements: | 
               
              
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                 Low; it grows in nutrient poor soils. | 
               
              
                | Salt Water Tolerance: | 
               
              
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                 Low; does not tolerate long-term flooding by salt or brackish water. | 
               
              
                | Salt Wind Tolerance: | 
               
              
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                 Moderate; grows near salt water, but is protected from direct salt spray by other vegetation. | 
               
              
                | Drought Tolerance: | 
               
              
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                 High; does not require any supplemental water once established. | 
               
              
                | Light Requirements: | 
               
              
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                 Full sun. | 
               
              
                | Flower Color: | 
               
              
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                 Yellow. | 
               
              
                | Flower Characteristics: | 
               
              
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                 Showy, about 1" long and 3/4" wide. | 
               
              
                | Flowering Season: | 
               
              
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                 All year. | 
               
              
                | Fruit: | 
               
              
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                 Slender cylindrical pods. | 
               
              
                | Wildlife and Ecology: | 
               
              
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                | Horticultural Notes: | 
               
              
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                | Comments: | 
               
              
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                 The flower resembles a small form of the commonly cultivated allamanda.  The sap can cause eye irritation and a skin rash.  It is listed as threatened by the state of Florida. See also the Florida Wildflower Foundation's  Flower Friday page. | 
               
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