East Texas Wildflowers

East Texas Wildflowers icon

East Texas Wildflowers

Wildflower Search

AppRecs review analysis

AppRecs rating 4.6. Trustworthiness 70 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 20 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.

★★★★

4.6

AppRecs Rating

Ratings breakdown

5 star

78%

4 star

0%

3 star

22%

2 star

0%

1 star

0%

What to know

Low review manipulation risk

20% review manipulation risk

Credible reviews

70% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews

High user satisfaction

78% of sampled ratings are 5 stars

About East Texas Wildflowers

This App helps find and identify plants. When you give the App information about a plant, such as its location, flower color and the time of year, the App will quickly show you which plants match your selections.

The App includes 3,805 species of plants found in East Texas. Overall, 2,154 are "Wildflowers", 418 are shrubs, 292 are broadleaf trees, 23 are conifers, 138 are vines, 40 are cactus, 616 are grass-like, 90 are fern-like, 120 are moss-like, 18 are seaweed and 153 are lichen.
East Texas Wildflowers Screenshots
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Reviews for East Texas Wildflowers

cyprice

Did you know, Texas, is not Illinois?

Groundbreaking. I know. Seems pretty obvious, but the two states are not comparable geographically, ecologically, visually, culturallyc etc. So, tell me why every single flower & plant description is, verbatim, copied from Illinois State Wildlife Department & pasted into the “description” section of the app. Why doesn’t this work? 1) “It can be common in our area.” One of the commonly listed descriptions. - Not really our area, though, is it? Illinois, I mean. Really though, don’t even have descriptions. If you don’t have the follow through or information or time to write accurately, don’t pretend to. I get that larger ecoregions blend into each other, but no. Can’t tell you how stupid it is to use Illinois as the main reference, when we have wildflower.org made just for Texas. Copy and paste those descriptions. The rest of the app is good, for the sole reason of ease of access to a native-ish plant list. The rest is unreliable, but full of potential. Best part of the app: The native vs invasive maps.

reneefoskett

Wonderful for learning wildflowers and flora!

I LOVE this app! Super user-friendly and easy to use. It gives you all the information on wildflowers- where they’re geographically found, shape, size, features, etc. You can filter the flowers by color, petal numbers, size, etc. BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE! You can also identify trees, shrubs, mosses, fungi, etc! It says “wildflowers” in the name of the app, but it has ALL flora in the database! We have this app downloaded for multiple other states too. It’s wonderful! Can’t say enough about it!

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