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Sweet scabious (Sixalix atropurpurea) observed in Arbor Hills Trail, Plano, TX, US

iNaturalist: areyes81

Citizen Science

Sweet scabious blooming along a North Texas nature trail signals this drought-tolerant Mediterranean flower can naturalize in urban green spaces, making it worth trialing in your own pollinator garden where summers are brutal.

Someone spotted and officially documented a Sweet scabious plant growing along a popular trail in Plano, Texas. This flower originally comes from the Mediterranean region and is prized for its deep purple, pincushion-shaped blooms that butterflies and bees can't resist. Finding it established in a Texas park suggests it can handle the local climate, which is useful information for local gardeners and naturalists.

Key Findings

1

A research-grade observation of Sweet scabious was confirmed at Arbor Hills Trail, Plano, TX — meeting iNaturalist's standard of multiple expert IDs or community agreement.

2

The sighting represents Sixalix atropurpurea growing in a semi-natural urban greenway setting in North Texas, outside its native Mediterranean range.

3

Plano, TX sits in USDA Hardiness Zone 8a, suggesting Sweet scabious may tolerate hot, periodically dry conditions in urban trail corridors.

chevron_right Technical Summary

A research-grade observation of Sweet scabious (Sixalix atropurpurea) has been recorded at Arbor Hills Trail in Plano, Texas — a notable sighting of this ornamental Mediterranean wildflower outside its native range.

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Abstract Preview

Research-grade observation of Sweet scabious in Arbor Hills Trail, Plano, TX, US.

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hub This connects to 11 other discoveries — Sweet scabious citizen-science, urban-ecology, pollinators +2 more 5 related articles

Species Mentioned

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