Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Common ragweed, Ambrosia artemisiifolia, is a widespread invasive species, and can become a noxious weed, that has naturalized in Europe; temperate Asia and the Indian subcontinent; temperate northern and southern Africa and Macaronesia; Oceania in Australia, New Zealand, and Hawaii; and Southwestern North America in California and the ...
Ambrosia eriocentra (A.Gray) W.W.Payne – woolly fruit bur ragweed, hollyleaf bursage; Ambrosia flexuosa (A.Gray) W.W.Payne; Ambrosia grayi (A.Nelson) Shinners – woollyleaf bur ragweed, lagoonweed; Ambrosia × helenae Rouleau – Helen ragweed; Ambrosia hispida Pursh – coastal ragweed; Ambrosia humi León de la Luz & Rebman [3] Ambrosia ...
Ambrosia trifida, the giant ragweed, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native to North America , where it is widespread in Canada , the United States , and northern Mexico .
Dublin Plantation. December 11, 2013 3135 Cottonwood Creek Road ... Recorded Texas Historic Landmark 8: Park Hotel: Park Hotel: May 23, 1980 : 217 S. River St.
Ambrosia cheiranthifolia is a rare species of flowering plant known by the common names South Texas ambrosia and Rio Grande ragweed. It is native to the coast of South Texas [1] and the Mexican states of Tamaulipas [2] and Coahuila. [3] It occurs in coastal prairie, grassland, and mesquite shrubland habitat. [2]
Ambrosia grayi, the woollyleaf bur ragweed, [3] is a North American species of plants in the family Asteraceae. It is native to the west-central part of the Great Plains of the United States, in the states of Nebraska, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Texas. [4] Ambrosia grayi is a perennial herb up to 30 cm (12 inches) tall. Leaves ...
Ambrosia deltoidea is a shrub growing from a taproot with many lateral and adventitious roots. The plant produces many thin branches growing up to about half a meter tall. It generally has many dead branches tangled in the living crown. It is drought-deciduous. The leaves are no more than 2 centimeters long.
Ambrosia confertiflora is native to much of northern Mexico (from Sonora to Tamaulipas) and the southwestern United States from California east as far as Kansas, Oklahoma, and central Texas. [5] It is also naturalized in various other regions, and has been declared a noxious weed in Australia [6] [7] [8] and in Israel. [9] It grows in disturbed ...