Kochia (Kochia scoparia L.) and Russian thistle (Salsola tragus L.) are troublesome annual weeds of rangelands, pastures, fields, disturbed areas, gardens, roadsides, ditchbanks, and small …
Kochia is native to central and eastern Europe and Asia. Kochia can be found in a very wide range of temperatures and climatic regions throughout the world, but is particularly adapted to …
Kochia / ˈkoʊkiə / [1] is a synonym of the genus Bassia, which belongs to the subfamily Camphorosmoideae of family Amaranthaceae. [2] Two American species traditionally included …
Kochia is an introduced, erect, annual forb with a taproot that forms pyramidal or rounded bushes up to 7 feet (2.1 m) tall. Phillips and Launchbaugh (1958) reported that the roots of Kochia …
Kochia (formerly Kochia scoparia) is a summer annual broadleaf weed species native to Eurasia and was introduced to the Americas as an ornamental in the mid to late 1800s by European …
Forage kochia [Bassia prostrata (L.) A.J. Scott] is a perennial, semi-evergreen species with 1-5” (2.5-13 cm) linear leaves. Common lambsquarters (Chenopodium album L.) has broader, …
There are two species ascribed to Kochia that are native to North America, K. americana S. Watson, and K. californica S. Watson. Leaf morphology of these has been examined and …
Two woody-based non-rhizomatous sub-shrub species of kochias are found in the western United States. The widely distributed native, gray molly, and its introduced and closely related …
Kochia is one of the major weed problems in the U.S. Great Plains where small grains are grown. Kochia and Russian thistle are two of the tumbleweeds common to the western U.S.