Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Packera aurea (formerly Senecio aureus), commonly known as golden ragwort or simply ragwort, is a perennial flower in the family Asteraceae.. It is also known as golden groundsel, squaw weed, life root, golden Senecio, uncum, uncum root, waw weed, false valerian, cough weed, female regulator, cocash weed, ragweed, staggerwort, and St. James wort.
The seedlings of S. ampullaceus often have a purplish color on the undersides of their leaves in the winter, especially along their midrib. [3] Flowering in early–mid spring, [7] Texas ragwort is a tall annual, [8] growing to from 20 centimeters (7.9 in) to 80 centimeters (31 in) tall and similar to S. quaylei.
Jacobaea vulgaris, (common) ragwort or, only in the USA tansy ragwort, a very common wild flower in Europe, widely naturalised elsewhere; Jacobaea aquatica, water ragwort, marsh ragwort; Jacobaea erucifolia, Hoary ragwort; Certain members of the genus Packera including: Packera obovata, Roundleaf ragwort; Packera aurea, golden ragwort
Packera is a genus of about 75 species of plants in the daisy family, Asteraceae. [1] Most species are commonly called ragworts or grounsels. Its members were previously included in the genus Senecio (where they were called aureoid senecios by Asa Gray), but were moved to a different genus based on chromosome numbers, a variety of morphological characters, and molecular phylogenetic evidence.
Senecio ampullaceus — Texas ragwort, Texas squaw-weed, Texas groundsel, clasping-leaf groundsel [10] Senecio angulatus L.f. — creeping groundsel Senecio antisanae
Common ragwort - Jacobaea vulgaris, and some other plants of the genus Jacobaea (once called cankerweed). Rattlewort - rattlebox, Crotalaria sagittalis. Ribwort - Plantago lanceolata. Hen plant. English plantain, the common plantain introduced into the United States from Europe. Rosewort - A plant of the rose family, Rosaceae.
Senecio spartioides is a species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common name broom-like ragwort. [1] It is native to the western United States as far east as the Dakotas, Texas, and northern Mexico. It can be found in dry, rocky, often disturbed areas in various habitat types.
Packera franciscana (syn. Senecio franciscanus) is a rare species of flowering plant in the aster family known by the common name San Francisco Peaks groundsel, or San Francisco Peaks ragwort. It is endemic to Arizona in the United States, where it is known only from the San Francisco Peaks in Coconino County .