Your search found 10 image(s) of leaves of American Lovage, Hairy Angelica and Water Hemlock.
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Habitat: Moist to dryish, nutrient-rich forests and woodlands
The straightish and toothless basal portion of each leaflet is distinctive, per Weakley's Flora.
Lateral veins of each leaflet terminate at the points of the teeth, per Wildflowers of Tennessee, the Ohio Valley, and the Southern Appalachians (Horn, Cathcart, Hemmerly, & Duhl, 2005).
Habitat: Marshes, bogs, seepages, fens, ditches, swamp forests
The veins of the leaflets end at notches (in Angelica they do not), per Wildflowers of the Eastern United States (Duncan & Duncan, 1999).
Habitat: Dry forests and woodlands, woodland borders, longleaf pine sandhills, hammocks, prairies, oak savannas
Stem leaves dark green, thick, and compound. Leaflet margins toothed, per Atlantic Coastal Plain Wildflowers (Nelson, 2006).
Upper petioles conspicuously expanded, per Vascular Flora of the Carolinas (Radford, Ahles, & Bell, 1968).