安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Weed of the Month – Cudweed - Home Garden Information Center
Cudweeds (Gamochaeta spp ) are herbs in the aster family that serve as host plants for American painted lady caterpillars There are about fifty plus species, and all are native to the Americas
- Gnaphalium (Cudweed, Cud Weed, Jersey Cudweed) | North Carolina . . .
Cudweeds are native herbs in the Asteraceae (daisy) family and comprise several closely related species that are winter annuals or short-lived perennials They can be found growing on several continents The leaves are gray-green and covered in wooly hairs as is most of the plant
- Cudweeds Weeds Identification Gallery UC Statewide IPM Program (UC IPM)
Most cudweed species are annuals Purple cudweed, Gnaphalium purpureum, is either a winter or summer annual, or biennial, as some plants will survive into the second year to mature, thereby behaving as a biennial Creeping cudweed, G collinum, is a perennial Everlasting cudweed, Gnaphalium luteo-album, is a landscape and nursery weed
- Gnaphalium - Wikipedia
Gnaphalium is a genus of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae, [2][4] commonly called cudweeds or (formerly) chafeweeds They are widespread and common in temperate regions, although some are found on tropical mountains or in the subtropical regions of the world
- California Cudweed - Friends of Edgewood
Asteraceae: Sunflower family – Gnaphalieae (cudweed) tribe – 1 Monterey County Wildflowers, Trees, and Ferns – A Photographic Guide Prigge, B A , and A C Gibson 2013 Pseudognaphalium californicum A Naturalist’s Flora of the Santa Monica Mountains and Simi Hills, California
- Cudweeds - webidguides. com
The cudweeds are generally annual plants that form a tussock of basal leaves before producing upright spikes that terminate in flower clusters Some of the associated species are perennials, with Curry-plant forming a woody bush
- California Cudweed - Calscape
California Cudweed (Pseudognaphalium californicum) is a species of flowering plant in the Asteraceae (Sunflower) family It is native to the west coast of North America from Washington to Baja California, where it is a member of the flora of many habitats, including chaparral
- Common Cudweed - NatureSpot
Short to low with dense grey-white hairs, stems erect Flower heads yellow in dense rounded clusters sometimes of 20 or more, 10 to 14 mm across Filago (Logfia) minima 10-40 flower-heads in each cluster; outer phyllaries (bracts under flower head) acuminate and erect in fruit
|
|
|