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It is named after the dogfennel that used to proliferate there.
Dogfennel spreads by both seeds and rootstocks and can grow quite aggressively.
Dog fennel, dog-fennel, or dogfennel is a common name for several plants and may refer to:
To remove infestations of dogfennel, the recommended course of action is to mow it and apply herbicides.
Dogfennel contains liver-damaging pyrrolizidine alkaloids, so livestock are known to eat all the turf around a stand of it.
Dogfennel thrives on roadsides, in fields and reduced tillage crops, as well as areas that have burned or otherwise been disturbed.
Dogfennel is eaten by Florida's scarlet-bodied wasp moth, Cosmosoma myrodora.
She -broke a dead dogfennel and used its feathery brown length like a whip to snap the heads off weeds that poked through the leaves on the ground.
Eupatorium capillifolium (dogfennel) is a perennial herbaceous plant in the family Asteraceae, native to southeastern North America.
Not seeing a weed close enough to snap without stepping aside, she broke the dogfennel in half, then again, until the pieces were no longer than her hand, and tossed them to the ground.
Dogfennel is closely related to Eupatorium compositifolium (yankeeweed) and Eupatorium leptophyllum and some authors consider all of them varieties of E. capillifolium.
Anthemis cotula is considered a weed due to its propensity for invading cultivated areas.
Anthemis cotula, also known as stinking chamomile, is a flowering annual plant with a noticeable and strong odor.
Anthemis cotula is an annual glandular plant with a harsh taste and an acrid smell.
Anthemis cotula (I)
Other recorded food plants include Anthemis cotula, Centaurea nigra and Lactuca sativa.
The leaves of Anthemis cotula have a similar appearance to those of the fennel plant (Foeniculum vulgare), from which the name "Dog's Fennel" is derived.