4.2 Article

The biology of Canadian weeds.: 115.: Conyza canadensis

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE
Volume 81, Issue 4, Pages 867-875

Publisher

AGRICULTURAL INST CANADA
DOI: 10.4141/P00-196

Keywords

Canada fleabane; ERICA; Conyza canadensis; Erigeron canadensis; horseweed

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Conyza canadensis (L.) Cronq. (Canada fleabane, horseweed, mare's-tail) is a winter or summer annual, native to North America, and found in all provinces of Canada except Newfoundland. It is a weed of orchards, vineyards, roadsides, and arable fields where tillage has been reduced or eliminated. Most seedlings emerge from late August through October and form rosettes which overwinter. Large numbers of small, wind-dispersed seeds, ranging to over 200 000 seeds per plant, are produced in late summer. Populations of C. canadensis in more than ten countries have evolved resistance to herbicides such as paraquat, atrazine, chlorsulfuron or glyphosate. Several paraquat resistant populations were found in orchards in Essex Country, Ontario. It serves as a wild host of the tarnished plant bug, and of aster yellows, a mycoplasma disease transmitted by the aster leaf hopper.

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