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Crabgrass. Crabgrass is that pesky, low-growing weed that spreads rapidly across your lawn. The best way to manage it is by pulling it out by the roots or by using a pre-emergent herbicide to ...
Vicia cracca (tufted vetch, cow vetch, bird vetch, blue vetch, boreal vetch), is a species of flowering plant in the pea and bean family Fabaceae. It is native to Europe and Asia. It occurs on other continents as an introduced species, including North America, where it is a common weed. It often occurs in disturbed habitats, including old ...
Other names are blueweed, Lady Campbell weed, Riverina bluebell, and purple viper's bugloss. Three other Echium species have been introduced and are of concern; viper's bugloss (Echium vulgare) is the most common of them. Viper's bugloss is biennial, with a single unbranched flowering stem and smaller, more blue flowers, but is otherwise similar.
Echium vulgare, known as viper's bugloss and blueweed, [1] is a species of flowering plant in the borage family Boraginaceae.It is native to most of Europe and western and central Asia [2] [3] and it occurs as an introduced species in north-eastern North America, south-western South America and the South and North Island of New Zealand.
It is one of several plants also known as bindi weed, bindii, or bindi-eye. A weedy plant known for its tiny sharp-needled seeds. It appears with small feathery leaves reminiscent of parsley, with an exposed upward-pointing rosette of seeds in a pod nestled at the branch junctions. Eventually small flowers appear if the plant is allowed to develop.
It is a common weed of cultivation, known in the Americas as annual bluegrass. [7] It occurs as a common constituent of lawns , where it is also often treated as a weed, and grows on waste ground. Many golf putting greens , including the Oakmont Country Club greens, are annual bluegrass, [ 8 ] although many courses have converted to creeping ...
The Valdosta-based company is currently working on a major project in Dougherty County, removing hydrilla in the blue hole at Radium Springs and will eventually clear invasive plants along the one ...
Commelina cyanea, commonly known as scurvy weed, is a perennial prostrate herb of the family Commelinaceae native to moist forests and woodlands of eastern Australia, [3] Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island. The blue flowers appear over the warmer months and are pollinated by bees and flies.