nutsedge การใช้
- Purple nutsedge tubers are connected in " chains ."
- Again, Image is a post-emergent product that helps control nutsedge.
- Pennant is a pre-emergent that targets yellow nutsedge in ornamental beds.
- McCloskey has a special relationship with purple nutsedge.
- I would blame that event on an untimely infestation of nutsedge and annual fleabane.
- Allelopathic interactions are an important factor in determining species distribution and abundance within plant nutsedge.
- Nutsedge particularly likes poorer draining areas of the garden and moist spots such as those near a sprinkler head.
- Image and Manage are post-emergents that target yellow and purple nutsedge, but read the labels before applying.
- Other species that can tolerate the acidic soils of the taiga are lichens and mosses, yellow nutsedge and water horsetail.
- The weed purple nutsedge was close to taking over the 10 acres of O'Dare's Osceola Organic Farm when he turned to solarization.
- Pesky nutsedge ( nutgrass ) is particularly adept at popping up in bare spots, but it loses ground in a thick lawn of St . Augustine.
- Some tuber-bearing species on the other hand, most significantly the purple nutsedge, " C . rotundus ", are considered invasive weeds in much of the world.
- A : Yellow nutgrass or nutsedge is a warm-season perennial weed with triangular stems, yellowish-green shiny foliage with a distinct ridge that gradually tapers to a point and yellow to brown flowers.
- For some Northern Paiutes, " Cyperus " tubers were a mainstay food, to the extent that they were known as " t鰒usi-d鰇ad?" ( " nutsedge tuber eaters " ).
- And each month the featured Playmate could call attention to a Social Security-related issue in provocative yet tasteful photos : " Miss March, Kimberlee Lou Nutsedge, believes that at least half of projected federal budget surpluses should be used to shore up Social Security reserves ."
- Guineagrass, chamberbitter, phyllanthus, southern crabgrass, yellow nutsedge and dogfennel rise robustly out of the formerly mulched-and-maintained planting beds and walkways; bindweed, Virginia creeper and cypress vine strangle fenceposts and tomato cages with their twirling embrace; and some weeds-- sandspurs, beggerticks, spiny amaranth and stinging nettle-- fight back when their livelihood is threatened.