Golden ragwort (Packera aurea) is a great shade-tolerant ground cover you can grow in winter. It's cold hardy in zones 3 through 8. It spreads out quickly by rhizomes to form a dense mat, just like ...
It's sea of bright yellow blooms that makes a picturesque contribution to the British countryside. But despite its pretty appearance, the ragwort plant poses a serious risk to horses - and it has ...
The NFU is reminding livestock farmers to remain vigilant to the risk of ragwort poisoning. Here's some advice on control and ...
Look around these days and you'll find the yellow flowers of tansy abundant in fields, roadsides and even gardens. "This is one of the worst years for tansy in some time," said Sam Leininger, WeedWise ...
Tansy ragwort (Senecio jacobaea) is an invasive weed with a long and deadly history in the Pacific Northwest. In Oregon, it is designated as a Class B invasive weed. It is believed to have been ...
Weeds like ragwort, thistles and docks can be a nightmare for keen gardeners, but a new study may make you think twice about getting rid of them. Researchers from the University of Sussex have ...
The weed common ragwort is a toxic plant that can pose a significant threat to grazing livestock. It is a sufficient enough hazard to be included in law as an ‘injurious weed’ and can be an offence ...
THE British Horse Society is sponsoring a Root Out Ragwort Week this month to coincide with the period when the plant is at its most dangerous. The society's campaign flies in the face of what it sees ...
Ragwort is a thuggish perennial weed, which means it is big and invasive, rooting itself firmly into your garden landscape. These weeds produce large perennial roots which store food reserves to keep ...
IAM afraid that Mrs Eileen Eastham, who reported the presence of the poisonous weed, ragwort (LET, August 11) is, to put it politely, "blowing into the wind." One plant less will do little for the ...
(1) Tansy ragwort plants were grown under different irrigation regimes to assess the effect of summer moisture stress on their capacity to compensate for defoliation by larvae of the cinnabar moth.
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