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Endemic Plants of South Carolina: The Complete List

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No plant species are strictly endemic to the state of South Carolina. There are no plants found only inside South Carolina’s political borders.

Define “endemic” as a species that lives naturally in one place and nowhere else. Use the strict, state-only definition and you get an empty list. Plant ranges ignore state lines. South Carolina shares the Atlantic Coastal Plain, Sandhills, and Appalachian foothills with neighboring states. That overlap makes true state-only endemics rare or nonexistent.

Rely on ecology, not politics, to find unique plants. Many species are endemic to ecoregions (for example, the Atlantic Coastal Plain or Carolina bays) or to very small habitats (islands, serpentine outcrops, or single-county sites). Taxonomy and better surveys also move species on and off narrow lists over time. Near matches include plants endemic to the Carolinas (both North and South), species restricted to the Sandhills, and county- or site-level endemics. Check authoritative sources such as NatureServe, USDA PLANTS, SCDNR, and university herbaria for those records.

Explore related, useful lists instead. Compile region-endemic species (Carolina or Southeastern endemics), South Carolina’s rare and listed plants, and plants confined to specific habitats (coastal dunes, bogs, or Sandhills). Use those lists for gardening, teaching, or conservation work.

Endemic Plants in Other U.S. States

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Dr. Tomás Reyes

MD-PhD in Molecular Biology from UCSF, with clinical rotations in internal medicine and a research focus on immunology. Left the hospital because he realized the gap between a medical paper and a patient's understanding was the most important gap in science. Now writes about gene therapies, pandemic preparedness, and everything in between. Still reads The Lancet every Friday morning out of habit.

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