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!
|
- Gutierrezia sarothrae - Wikipedia
It is a subshrub native to much of the western half of North America, from western Canada to northern Mexico, and can be found in a number of arid, grassland, and mountain habitats It can be toxic to livestock in large quantities, due mainly to the presence of saponins
- Snakeweed: Folk Uses, Potential Health Benefits, and Safety Risks
Learn snakeweed folk uses, potential topical benefits, and key safety risks Explore what this traditional desert herb may offer and why caution matters
- Snakeweed: Native Shrub for Pollinators
Gutierrezia sarothrae, commonly known as Snakeweed, Broom Snakeweed, or Broomweed, is a widespread and extremely tough native subshrub of the arid and semi-arid West that covers large areas of open rangeland, desert grassland, and desert scrub with a brilliant yellow bloom each fall
- Gutierrezia sarothrae, Broom Snakeweed, Southwest Desert Flora
Comments: Broom Snakeweed is a native plant that has adapted well to its arid and semi-arid conditions and habitats and is found in a wide variety of habitats identified above It even thrives in poor soils such as salty soils such as saline soil, calcareous and alkaline soils
- Snakeweed - Colorado National Monument (U. S. National Park Service)
Did you know: it has been said that a poultice of ground and boiled leaves of the snakeweed can be used to treat snake bites in sheep, hence the common name of this broom-like plant
- Control Perennial Snakeweeds - New Mexico State University
Snakeweeds, often called turpentine weed, rockweed, matchweed, or yellow top, are widely distributed throughout most of New Mexico Plant numbers vary widely from one location to another and from one year to the next Snakeweed populations are cyclic over time
- Broom Snakeweed, Gutierrezia Sarothrae - American Southwest
Yellow wildflowers of western USA: Gutierrezia sarothrae, broom snakeweed: a subshrub with narrow leaves, clustered stems and dense clusters of yellow flowerheads, containing both ray and disc florets
- snakeweed | The Tony Hillerman Portal
Often perceived as a weed, snakeweed can be mistaken for Rabbitbrush, which does not flower Snakeweed can be toxic to sheep if eaten in great amounts; however, American Pronghorn prefer this shrub for browsing Snakeweed is often used for medicinal purposes by various Native American tribes
|
|
|