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Top 20 Most Common Plants in Amara

In Amara, you can find Grain sorghum, Barley, Rivet wheat, Jade plant, Apple of Sodom, and more! There are 20 types of plants in total. Be sure to look out for these common plants when you’re walking on the streets, in parks, or public gardens.

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Most Common Plants
Grain sorghum
1. Grain sorghum
The grain of grain sorghum is utilized for human consumption, animal feed, and ethanol manufacturing. It is commonly grown in tropical and subtropical countries, originating in Africa. The grain is used to make liquor, animal feed, and bio-based ethanol, among other things.
Barley
2. Barley
Hordeum vulgare or barley is an important cereal grain that's grown globally. It's commonly used in soups, stews, breads, and as a source of malt for alcoholic beverages like beer. The economic value of its trade globally is over $33 billion.
Rivet wheat
3. Rivet wheat
The rivet wheat plant is commonly cultivated as durum wheat. Durum wheat is very hardy and suitable for cold climates. Its seeds can be eaten whole or turned into flour. Rivet wheat flour has been traditionally used for pasta and biscuits. The fibers from the plant are also used for making green-toned paper.
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Jade plant
4. Jade plant
Looking like a miniature fairy tale tree, jade plant is one of the world's most popular succulents. Native to southern regions of Africa, Crassula ovata is well adapted to the dry warm air of modern homes. It grows slowly but lives for so long that plants get passed from generation to generation. It is toxic to dogs, cats, and horses, and even mildly toxic to humans.
Apple of Sodom
5. Apple of Sodom
Apple of Sodom, or Calotropis procera, is an extremely poisonous plant. The fruit of this plant ripens and bursts, causing the seeds to scatter. In Jamaica, the fibers inside of the fruit are collected and used to stuff pillows.
Tomato
6. Tomato
Solanum lycopersicum is an annual or perennial herbaceous vine native to Central and South America that produces a large, juicy, edible fruit known as tomato. Today there are over 10000 cultivated varieties. Although tomato is the world’s most popular vegetable, botanically it is a fruit.
Golden pothos
7. Golden pothos
The golden pothos (Epipremnum aureum) is a popular houseplant that is commonly seen in Australia, Asia, and the West Indies. It goes by many nicknames, including "devil's ivy", because it is so hard to kill and can even grow in low light conditions. Golden pothos has poisonous sap, so it should be kept away from pets and children.
Chick Pea
8. Chick Pea
Chick Pea (Cicer arietinum) is an annual, bushy plant widely grown for its nutritious seeds, also called chickpeas. They are high in protein and fiber. They contain iron, phosphorus and folic acid. The plant blooms in summer and seeds ripen about four months after planting.
Khat
9. Khat
Khat is a slow-growing evergreen shrub that was a traditional feature in the cultural beliefs and rituals in East Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Khat can tolerate a variety of soil types and is noted for the red hue of its young stems.
Golden dewdrops
10. Golden dewdrops
Golden dewdrops (Duranta erecta) is an ornamental sprawling shrub commonly found in subtropical and tropical gardens all over the world. Its gentle purple blossoms are often visited by butterflies and hummingbirds. Golden dewdrops is considered a weed in Australia, South Africa and certain parts of East Asia.
Guava
11. Guava
Guava (*Psidium guajava*) is a fruit-producing evergreen shrub that grows natively in the Caribbean region and South America. Guava attracts the honey bee and other insects, and guava fruit is edible. Additionally, guava wood is used for smoking meat.
Rose of sharon
12. Rose of sharon
Hibiscus syriacus is a deciduous shrub with trumpet-shaped pink, lavender, or white flowers. Although it was first collected by Western botanists from Syrian gardens, “rose of sharon” is native to south-central and southeastern China. Because of its hardiness and prolific blooming, it is cultivated all around the world. It is the national flower of South Korea, mentioned in its national anthem.
Japanese glorybower
13. Japanese glorybower
Japanese glorybower (Clerodendrum japonicum) is a flowering species native to Asia. Also known as the red glory blower and the bagflower. It is a perfect plant in freeze-free gardens which blooms throughout summer into fall. It attracts hummingbirds and butterflies as a pollinator.
Common barberry
14. Common barberry
Common barberry is a shrub with unpleasant-smelling flowers and red berries. The flowers can be used to create yellow dye while the berries have culinary and medicinal uses in Iran and medicinal use in China that dates back 3,000 years. Despite this, common barberry can be a host to wheat rust that is highly damaging to grain crops in America.
Papaya
15. Papaya
Papaya is a fruit-bearing plant that originates from Central America. The fruits are edible and sweet and juicy when ripe. An enzyme collected from the milky sap is used as a meat softener, which if ingested may be toxic. Keeping a papaya plant in your garden will welcome many birds to your landscape.
Prairie Sunflower
16. Prairie Sunflower
Prairie Sunflower (Helianthus petiolaris) thrives best in sunlit areas that are grassy and open and is unable to grow in shaded areas. Prairie Sunflower flowers from summer to fall and its seeds are edible. It’s indigenous to the Western United States but has migrated eastward over the years.
Wheat
17. Wheat
Wheat (Triticum aestivum) is a grass species that is commercially grown for cereal grain. Approximately 95% of all wheat grown in the world is this species, Triticum aestivum. It has proved well adapted to modern industrial baking, and has replaced many of the other wheat, barley, and rye species.
Bull thistle
18. Bull thistle
Bull thistle (Cirsium vulgare) is a thistle plant native to Europe, Africa, and Asia. Bull thistle produces a large amount of nectar and attracts pollinators. Bull thistle is considered a noxious weed in areas of Europe and Australia.
Chinese hibiscus
19. Chinese hibiscus
Chinese hibiscus is a small flowering tree. Its fragrant flowers are well known the world over, leading to many cultivated variants. Chinese hibiscus is the national flower of Malaysia and is featured on Malaysian coins. Although the Latin name, Hibiscus rosa-sinensis, means “the rose of China,” it is not related to true roses.
Gallant soldier
20. Gallant soldier
Gallant soldier (Galinsoga parviflora) is named after the Spanish botanist Galinsoga for the genus, and parviflora means it has many small flowers. It is a plant species related to the sunflower, though its flowers are tiny. Nevertheless, each plant generates thousands of seeds. This species is poisonous to goats so ranchers need to avoid this weed as much as possible.
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