Young Dittrichia graveolens, stinkwort, showing "Christmas tree" form |
The content below pulls together two articles from the upcoming newsletter, text reused with permission, photos used with permission too. (Nice thing about the blog -- more room for photos.) It's good to spread the word widely about this widely spreading weed.
Wanted Dead or ... ... DEAD!
DITTRICHIA GRAVEOLENS, a.k.a. stinkwort, is a new invasive non-native plant to watch out for, first recorded in the early 1980s in Santa Clara County. It is a late-summer to fall annual that germinates over a prolonged period from May to September, putting it out of sync with the seasonal development—and control methods—of other non-native warm season annuals in the Asteraceae family.
Last year's skeleton still shows the "Christmas tree" shape. Surrounded by seedlings. |
At maturity, the plant is the shape of a perfect Christmas tree. The tiny dandelion-like flowers are yellow and have ray and disc petals.
Stinkwort seeds have fluffy cobwebby filaments like dandelion seeds. Photo credit: Toni Corelli |
Buds, flowers, foliage of stinkwort. Photo credit: Toni Corelli |
In small infestations the best method of control is hand pulling the young plants, preferably before they start flowering. If plants of Dittrichia are pulled when in flower they will continue to ripen seed even after they’re uprooted, so they should be bagged and disposed of and not left on the ground.
Uncontrolled, Dittrichia can convert large swaths of land to worthless monocultures.
Click here to view the California Invasive Plant Council page on Dittrichia.
Click here to view a wonderful poster on this scourge, from the Cal-IPC site.
Native Tarweeds
Madia elegans with (closed flowers of) Clarkia rubicunda in my garden. Both are local wild natives where I live. |
Woodland madia, Anisocarpus madioides. Photo credit: Pete Veilleux, East Bay Wilds |
Madias range in size from about six inches up to six feet tall. Their foliage is heavily glandular (sticky!) with a sweet fragrance. The flowers are yellow, with disc and ray flowers. Madia elegans flowers are showy and can have brown in the disc and base of the ray petals. Flowers range in size from small to large and showy.
These tiny flowers sit atop a large plant! Madia sativa, coast tarweed. |
So - Weed early and weed often!
Lovely blossom of Madia elegans -- to end on an upbeat! |