Integrated pest management resources for Michigan Michigan State University home IPM Michigan home
Weed Identification in Christmas Trees

Search

Christmas trees
Field crops
Fruit
Home and yard
Nursery and landscape
Turfgrass
Vegetable


Diagnostic Services
Soil/Plant Nutrient Lab
Enviro-weather
Regional IPM Center
Pesticide safety
Organic: New Ag Network
Invasive species
Sustainable ag & food systems


MSU ANR departments
MSU Extension

Site index
Contacts/permissions

Pennsylvania smartweed - Polygonum pensylvanicum L.
Home > Pennslyvania smartweed
Life cycle: Erect summer annual.

Leaves: Cotyledons are narrow oval to lance-shaped with rounded tips. Leaves are alternate, lance-shaped with pointed tips and smooth margins, usually hairless and occasionally with a purple watermark.

Stems: Branched, erect up to 4 feet tall and jointed with swollen nodes. A smooth, membranous sheath (ocrea) surrounds the stem at the base of each petiole.

Flowers and fruit: Small, pink to white flowers form in dense, spikelike clusters at the tips of stems. The seed is enclosed in a single-seeded, flat, glossy black, round to oval fruit with a pointed tip.

Reproduction: Seeds.
 
Similar weeds: Ladysthumb (P. persicaria L.)
Differs by having a fringe of bristly hairs at the top of the ocrea. Usually has a purple watermark on leaf.

Pale smartweed (P. lapathifolium L.) Differs by having young leaf undersides with whitish hair, older leaf undersides with yellow glands and a nodding inflorescence.

Swamp smartweed (P. amphibium var. emersum Michx.) Differs by having perennial, creeping, woody rhizomes and usually hairy foliage; found in wetter environment.
Swamp smartweed
Hairy foliage of swamp smartweed.
Pennsylvania smartweed leaf
Pennsylvania smartweed leaf.
Pennsylvania smartweed ocrea
Left: Pennsylvania smartweed ocrea. Right: Ladysthumb ocrea.
Pennsylvania smartweed flower Pennsylvania smartweed seedling
Pennsylvania smartweed immature flower cluster. Pennsylvania smartweed seedling.
 
The MSU IPM Program maintains this site as an access point to pest management information at MSU. The IPM Program is administered within the Department of Entomology, fueled by research from the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station, delivered to citizens through MSU Extension, and proud to be a part of Project GREEEN.
Email
the web developer.

02/08/08