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There isn't enough information available to know if dodder is safe.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of dodder for these uses.
That should eliminate most, but maybe not all, of the dodder seeds.
This was one of many mills along the Dodder in the nineteenth century.
The dodder can grow and attach itself to multiple plants.
And that, they said, offers hope for ways to fight dodder infestations.
The original root of the dodder in the soil then dies.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for dodder.
It is not "flashy" like the Dodder, but builds up over a period.
This type was described as having lush leaves, yellow flowers and fruit like dodder.
The dodder is one of nature's most accomplished parasites.
Thus did the dodder acquire its image of immortality.
Using the resources in the seed endosperm, Dodder is able to germinate.
If a plant is not reached within 5 to 10 days of germination, the dodder seedling will die.
Milltown was the site of several working mills on the River Dodder.
Formerly a small village in its own right, it is situated near the River Dodder.
It is named after the River Dodder, which flows through it.
The river Dodder runs through Donnybrook and at one time there was a ford here.
A.The question describes a parasitic plant called dodder, which has a reputation of being most difficult to control.
The villain is cuscuta, more commonly known as dodder.
Getting rid of dodder is not simple.
A. Dodder is a nasty annual vine that doesn't even bother to produce its own chlorophyll.
The appropriate dose of dodder depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
The dodder's tiny shoot wraps around the plant and taps into it, stealing nutrients.
The arch can still be viewed from nearby Dodder Park Road.
In 2009, two of them were combined into a separate species called Cuscuta pacifica.
His early studies were on the genus Cuscuta in which he described 67 new species and 39 new varieties.
They feed on a wide variety of plants in the west, including Arbutus and Cuscuta species.
Although it resembles the dodders of the genus Cuscuta, it is unrelated.
In practice however, the confusion between the various species of Cassytha and Cuscuta is so natural that their common names are more or less interchangeable.
Examples of parasites include the plants mistletoe and cuscuta, and organisms such as hookworms.
Tendrils of Cuscuta, a parasitic plant, are guided by airborne chemicals, and only twine around suitable hosts.
Similarly Cuscuta is the only genus in Cuscutaceae (and the common name dodder redirects there too).
Dodder (Cuscuta species).
Cuscuta epilinum (I)
Cuscuta glomerata (N)
A parasitic plant using balsams as host is the European Dodder (Cuscuta europea).
Cuscuta myricoides (as S. myricoides )
Superficially, and in some aspects of their ecology, they closely resemble plants in the unrelated genus Cuscuta: the dodders.
Empress Dou seized the cuscuta and falsely accused Consort Song of using it for witchcraft.
Consort Song had become ill, and in her illness, she craved raw cuscuta, and she requested that her family bring them.
Digital Atlas of Cuscuta (Convolvulaceae)
An example, Dodder (Cuscuta spp.)
In: Yuncker TG, Cuscuta.
The dodder (cuscuta) is also parasitic, generally favouring nettles, and siphons its nourishment through periodic 'plugs' along its stem.
A nationally scarce species which is locally common on the River Mole is the Greater Dodder Cuscuta europaea.
The rationale for some of the common names is unclear, as they include examples normally applied to unrelated plants, including twining parasites (e.g. "devil's hair" for Cuscuta).
Swift, C. E. Cuscuta and Grammica species - Dodder: A Plant Parasite.
They can be formed from modified shoots, modified leaves, or auxiliary branches and are sensitive to airborne chemicals, often determining the direction of growth, as in species of Cuscuta.
The leaves are reduced to tiny scales, and it possesses no roots because it is a parasitic plant, like all Cuscuta, and taps nutrients from host plants with its haustoria.