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            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/gymnocladus-dioicus/?format=api",
            "slug": "gymnocladus-dioicus",
            "latin_name": "Gymnocladus dioicus",
            "description": "The Kentucky coffee tree (Gymnocladus dioicus), also known as American coffee berry, Kentucky mahogany, nicker tree, and stump tree, is a tree in the subfamily Caesalpinioideae of the legume family Fabaceae, native to the Midwest, Upper South, Appalachia, and small pockets of New York in the United States and Ontario in Canada. The seed may be roasted and used as a substitute for coffee beans; however, unroasted pods and seeds are toxic. The wood from the tree is used by cabinetmakers and carpenters. It is also planted as a street tree.\nFrom 1976 to 1994, the Kentucky coffeetree was the state tree of Kentucky, after which the tulip poplar was returned to that designation.",
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/humanuses/timber/?format=api"
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/ecologicalroles/habitat-provision/?format=api",
                    "https://treescape.app/api/ecologicalroles/shade-provision/?format=api",
                    "https://treescape.app/api/ecologicalroles/soil-erosion-control/?format=api"
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                "soil_preferences": [
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/soilpreference/sandy/?format=api"
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/propagationmethod/seed-propagation/?format=api"
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        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/gymnosporia-senegalensis/?format=api",
            "slug": "gymnosporia-senegalensis",
            "latin_name": "Gymnosporia senegalensis",
            "description": "Gymnosporia is an Old World genus of plants, that comprise suffrutices, shrubs and trees. It was formerly considered congeneric with Maytenus, but more recent investigations separated it based on the presence of achyblasts (truncated branchlets) and spines, alternate leaves or fascicles of leaves, an inflorescence that forms a dichasium, mostly unisexual flowers, and fruit forming a dehiscent capsule, with an aril on the seed. It is dioecious, with male and female flowers on separate plants.",
            "gbif_id": 3793847,
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/humanuses/medicinal-leaves/?format=api"
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        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/gynura-aurantiaca/?format=api",
            "slug": "gynura-aurantiaca",
            "latin_name": "Gynura aurantiaca",
            "description": "Gynura aurantiaca, called purple passion or velvet plant, is a species of flowering plant in the daisy family Asteraceae. It is native to Southeast Asia but grown in many other places as a house plant. In warm regions, it is frequently grown outdoors on patios and in gardens rather than inside buildings, and hence it has escaped into the wild in Africa, Australia, South America, Mesoamerica, Florida, and a few other places.",
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        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/gynura-procumbens/?format=api",
            "slug": "gynura-procumbens",
            "latin_name": "Gynura procumbens",
            "description": "Gynura procumbens (also known as sabuñgai or sambung nyawa), sometimes called \"longevity spinach\" or \"longevity greens\", is an edible vine found in China, Southeast Asia, and Africa. Leaves are ovate-elliptic or lanceolate, 3.5 to 8 centimetres (1+1⁄3 to 3+1⁄6 in) long, and 0.8 to 3.5 centimetres (1⁄3 to 1+1⁄3 in) wide. Flowering heads are panicled, narrow, yellow, and 1 to 1.5 centimetres (1⁄3 to 2⁄3 in) long. The plant grows wild but is also cultivated as a vegetable or medicinal plant. Its young leaves are used for cooking, such as with meat and prawns in a vegetable soup.",
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        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/gypsophila-paniculata/?format=api",
            "slug": "gypsophila-paniculata",
            "latin_name": "Gypsophila paniculata",
            "description": "Gypsophila paniculata, the baby's breath, common gypsophila or panicled baby's-breath, is a species of flowering plant in the family Caryophyllaceae, native to central and eastern Europe. It is an herbaceous perennial growing to 1.2 m (4 ft) tall and wide, with mounds of branching stems covered in clouds of tiny white flowers in summer (hence the common name \"baby's breath\"). Another possible source of this name is its scent, which has been described as sour milk, like a baby's “spit-up”. Its natural habitat is on the Steppes in dry, sandy and stony places, often on calcareous soils (gypsophila = \"chalk-loving\"). Specimens of this plant were first sent to Linnaeus from St. Petersburg by the Swiss-Russian botanist Johann Amman.",
            "gbif_id": 5384458,
            "image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/gypsophila-paniculata_thumbnail_z094iZ5.jpg",
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                "width_minimum": "1.20",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/habenaria-carnea/?format=api",
            "slug": "habenaria-carnea",
            "latin_name": "Habenaria carnea",
            "description": "The following is a list of species of Habenaria recognised by the Plants of the World Online as at March 2024:",
            "gbif_id": 2828520,
            "image_thumbnail": null,
            "image_large": null,
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                "human_uses": [],
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/hackelia-virginiana/?format=api",
            "slug": "hackelia-virginiana",
            "latin_name": "Hackelia virginiana",
            "description": "Hackelia virginiana, a biennial plant, is commonly known as beggar's lice, sticktight or stickseed.  However, the common names beggar's lice and stick-tight are also used for very different plants, such as Desmodium species that are also known as \"tick-trefoil\".",
            "gbif_id": 2925932,
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            "image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/hackelia-virginiana_thumbnail_lDITJO2.jpg",
            "properties": {
                "height_maximum": "1.50",
                "height_confidence": "0.9",
                "height_source": "https://treescape.app/api/sources/784/?format=api",
                "width_minimum": "0.30",
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                "width_maximum": "0.60",
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/haematoxylum-campechianum/?format=api",
            "slug": "haematoxylum-campechianum",
            "latin_name": "Haematoxylum campechianum",
            "description": "Haematoxylum campechianum (blackwood, bloodwood tree, bluewood, campeachy tree, campeachy wood, campeche logwood, campeche wood, Jamaica wood, logwood or logwood tree) is a species of flowering tree in the legume family, Fabaceae, that is native to southern Mexico,where it is known as Árbol de campeche, and introduced to the Caribbean, northern Central America, and other localities around the world. The tree was of great economic importance from the 17th century to the 19th century, when it was commonly logged and exported to Europe for use in dyeing fabrics. The modern nation of Belize developed from 17th- and 18th-century logging camps established by the English. The tree's scientific name means \"bloodwood\" (haima being Greek for blood and xylon for wood).",
            "gbif_id": 2950903,
            "image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/haematoxylum-campechianum_thumbnail_3qdNQAX.jpg",
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/growthhabits/tree/?format=api"
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                "human_uses": [
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                    "https://treescape.app/api/humanuses/medicinal-bark/?format=api"
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        },
        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/hagenia-abyssinica/?format=api",
            "slug": "hagenia-abyssinica",
            "latin_name": "Hagenia abyssinica",
            "description": "Hagenia is a monotypic genus of flowering plant with the sole species Hagenia abyssinica, native to the high-elevation Afromontane regions of central and eastern Africa. It also has a disjunct distribution in the high mountains of East Africa from Sudan and Ethiopia in the north, through Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Tanzania, to Malawi and Zambia in the south. A member of the rose family, its closest relative is the Afromontane genus Leucosidea.",
            "gbif_id": 5370415,
            "image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/hagenia-abyssinica_thumbnail_zWxm5nY.jpg",
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                "height_confidence": "0.9",
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        {
            "url": "https://treescape.app/api/species/hamamelis-virginiana/?format=api",
            "slug": "hamamelis-virginiana",
            "latin_name": "Hamamelis virginiana",
            "description": "Hamamelis virginiana, known as witch-hazel, common witch-hazel, American witch-hazel and beadwood, is a species of flowering shrub native to eastern North America, from Nova Scotia west to Minnesota, and south to central Florida to eastern Texas.",
            "gbif_id": 3152827,
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}