Every accepted species in the genus is listed. A name links to its page when we hold at least three commercially licensed photographs of it. Where we do not, the row shows how many we actually found, which is usually none.
| Species | Authority | Usable photographs | Page |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ifloga ambigua | (L.) Druce | 39 | documented |
| Ifloga repens | (L.) Hilliard & B.L.Burtt | 38 | documented |
| Ifloga glomerata | (Harv.) Schltr. | 28 | documented |
| Ifloga polycnemoides | Fenzl | 3 | documented |
| Ifloga decumbens | (Thunb.) Schltr. | 4 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga paronychioides | (DC.) Fenzl | 2 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga thellungiana | Hilliard & B.L.Burtt | 2 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga spicata | (Forssk.) Sch.Bip. | 1 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga anomala | Hilliard | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga candida | Hilliard | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga labillardierei | (Pamp.) Fayed & Zareh | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga lerouxiae | (Beyers) N.G.Bergh | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga molluginoides | (DC.) Hilliard | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga obovata | Bolle | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga pilulifera | Schltr. | 0 | below the evidence gate |
| Ifloga verticillata | (L.f.) Fenzl | 0 | below the evidence gate |
This site is commercial, so it can only publish photographs licensed for commercial use. Roughly three quarters of the photographs on iNaturalist are CC BY-NC, which excludes them. A species needs at least three usable photographs before we will build it a page, because a page with one picture and no traits tells you nothing you could not get from a search result, and generating hundreds of thousands of those is precisely the practice that got the previous version of this site deleted.
So the species above without a link are not errors and they are not omissions. They are real, accepted plants that we cannot yet document to the standard we hold ourselves to, and the count in the photographs column is exactly how far short we fall.