Porter aster, a late-blooming native plant |
There is another less-friendly white daisy that is also blooming
right now that some people confuse with Porter aster – this is the State List B
noxious weed called Scentless chamomile (Matricaria
perforata or Tripleurospermum inodorum). This weed is rapidly increasing
in population in our mountain counties, forming monocultures in places like
Winter Park, Fraser, Nederland, and many other locations. The reason it can
spread so fast is that in a single year, one plant can produce up to 300,000
seeds! http://www.colorado.gov/cs/Satellite/ag_Conservation/CBON/1251621067095. I swear that it often seems as though each
one of those seeds germinates and becomes a plant. Yikes!
Please remove it from your property if you have it – and the task will
be MUCH easier if you do it early in the game, before the exponential explosion
occurs.
Scentless chamomile, a noxious weed, will take over every available bit of land |
At first glance, the can look pretty similar, but there are some
easy ways to tell the noxious from the native:
1 First, look at the leaves.
Scentless chamomile has ferny leaves |
Next, look at the flowers – scentless chamomile’s flowers
are bigger, and have a larger yellow center (disk flowers). Porter aster's center is small and frequently turns from yellow to a brown/black.
{
Porter aster is overall a smaller, shorter plant. I often see butterflies and bumblebees land on it for the nectar, and finches eating the seeds. The only thing I see landing on scentless chamomile is flies.
I
If you think scentless chamomile is pretty, then supply yourself with free flowers -- Pick a bouquet (make sure to get the roots) and throw it away (after enjoying it in a vase) |
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