|
- The Knotty Problem of Invasive Japanese Knotweed - Daves Garden
That something is that Japanese knotweed is TOO easy to grow and can thrive almost anywhere, crowding out less vigorous native species in the process And even though this invasive plant does die back to the ground during winter, it is far from tropical, as its deep roots allow it to tolerate temperatures to 30 below
- Invasive Weeds: Creeping Buttercup - Daves Garden
Get the Invasive Weeds of North America field guide here Identifying Buttercups Buttercups are both perennial and annual, and comprise about 400 species globally The finely-palmate, alternate leaves are quite attractive, often with light mottling on the dark green
- Invasive Plants:****anemone invasion**** HELP! - Daves Garden
Yeah, I know it's invasive - but I'm fact-checking and in DG we show it as getting to 36", yet that seems very high from my experiences, and from what I'm seeing in other references My sense is it's more closely the 12-15" or maybe even 12-18" height range
- The Invaders: Lily of the Valley - Daves Garden
Like many other invasive groundcovers, Convallaria propagates itself vegetatively from underground rhizomes While it does produce seeds, the cross between daughter plants descended from a single parent seems to be sterile, and it spreads so vigorously that an entire bed might be daughters of the same original pa
- Invasive Plants:Coral Bells . . . invasive? common? - Daves Garden
An invasive plant has the ability to thrive and spread aggressively outside its natural range A naturally aggressive plant may be especially invasive when it is introduced to a new habitat An invasive species that colonizes a new area may gain an ecological edge since the insects, diseases, and foraging animals that naturally keep its growth
- The Lawn Invaders: Violets - Daves Garden
The fragrant sweet violet, Viola odorata, is often accused of the invasive crimes of its wild relative, but it is a European import, although widely naturalized, while the common wild blue violet, now known as Viola sororia, is a North American native To complicate identification even further, some of the species cross-breed freely
- PlantFiles: The Largest Plant Identification Reference Guide - Daves . . .
Diabolically invasive - spreads rapidly into natural areas and the seed bank sticks around for years One of the more problematic non-na Read More tive invaders in woodlands of my region and on my own land
- How invasive is Creeping Jenny (lysimachia)? - Daves Garden
Lysimachia nummularia (creeping jenny, moneywort) is on the Federal List of Invasive Plants for: CT,DC,IN,MD,MI,MO,NJ,OR,PA,TN,VA,WI,WV I found this information in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden All-Region Guides, "Native Alternatives to Invasive Plants" Since I have started to volunteer in the local forest preserve I have a new view of plants
|
|
|