Fact Sheets

FICHES DE
RENSEIGNEMENTS

Ambrosia trifida L.

Family :

Famille :

Asteraceae

Synonym(s) :

Synonyme(s) :

Common Name(s) :

Nom(s) commun(s) :

Giant ragweed
(English) (GC 2016)

Grande herbe à poux (French) (GC 2016)

Blood ragweed (English) (CABI 2020)

Buffalo-weed (English) (CABI 2020)

Artemisa grande (Spanish) (CABI 2020)

Ambroisie trifide (French) (CABI 2020)

San lie ye tun cao (Chinese) (CABI 2020)

  • Giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida) burs

  • Giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida) burs

  • Giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida) bur

  • Giant ragweed (Ambrosia trifida) bur

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Overview

Aperçu

Regulation :

Remarques Réglementation:

  • CFIA Weed Seeds Order - Class 2: Primary Noxious Weed Seeds
  • Quarantine lists of countries e.g. India *may be updated without notice

Regulation Notes:

Distribution :

Répartition :

Native to North America and introduced to Asia (China, Georgia, Israel, Japan) and Europe (USDA-ARS 2020). Occurs in most of Canada, except Nunavut and Yukon territories, and reported as ephemeral in British Columbia (Brouillet et al. 2010+).

Habitat and Crop Association :

Habitat et Cultures Associées :

Ambrosia trifida likely occupied riparian habitats before widespread cultivation, and now occupies mesic soils in old fields, field margins, pastures, gardens, fencerows, shores, roadsides, railway lines, and other disturbed areas (Bassett and Crompton 1982; Montagnani et al. 2017). It is a weed of many broadleaved crops, especially Zea mays (corn), Glycine max (soybean) and Gossypium hirsutum (cotton) (Montagnani et al. 2017).

Economic Use, cultivation area, and Weed Association :

Utilisation économique, zone de culture et association de mauvaises herbes :

Duration of Life Cycle :

Durée du cycle vital:

Annual

Dispersal Unit Type :

Type d’unité de dispersion :

Bur

General Information

RENSEIGNEMENTS GÉNÉRAUX

One Ambrosia trifida plant generally produces a few hundred burs that are heavy with no obvious dispersal mechanisms (Bassett and Crompton 1982). Movement of burs after dispersal can occur through Lumbricus terrestris (earthworm) activity (Regnier et al. 2008), contaminated seed, wool processing, agricultural transport or periodic flooding (Montagnani et al. 2017).

A. trifida is an aggressive weed of grain crops and no-tillage fields (Regnier et al. 2008). Copious pollen production is a major cause of late summer hay fever, due to allergenic compounds and spine-covered grains (Bassett and Crompton 1982).

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Ambrosia trifida infestation (Ohio State Weed Lab, The Ohio State University, Bugwood.org)

Identification

Identification

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  • Bur

    Size

    • Bur length*: 4.1-7.7 mm (not including apical spike); width: 2.3 -6.1 mm
    *Note: minimum and maximum of 20 burs in a normal range of this species using image measurement (ISMA 2020)

    Shape

    • Wedge-shaped burs with large spikes at the wide end, angular in 3 dimensions

    Surface Texture

    • Burs are smooth textured, with 5 longitudinal ribs, transverse wrinkles between ribs

    Colour

    • Burs dull straw-yellow, greyish-brown, yellowish-brown or brown

    Other Features

    • Each of the bur ribs ends in a spike at the wide end of the bur, and they surround a central spike (length*: 1.8 – 2.5 mm)
    *Note: minimum and maximum of 10 burs in a normal range of this species using specimen measurement (ISMA 2020)
  • Achene

    Size

    • Fills the bur, similar to bur size

    Shape

    • Achene is teardrop-shaped

    Surface Texture

    • Achene is smooth

    Colour

    • Achene is grey

    Other Features

    • Achene wall is thin and easily broken
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  • Seed

    Size

    • Seed size similar to achene size

    Shape

    • Seed is teardrop-shaped

    Surface Texture

    • Seed is smooth

    Colour

    • Seed is orange

    Other Features

    • Seed coat thin and transparent
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  • Embryo

    Size

    • The embryo fills the seed

    Shape

    • Embryo is spatulate, axial position

    Endosperm

    • Endosperm absent, nutritive tissue stored in the cotyledons

    Other Features

    • Cotyledons are fleshy and soft-textured

Identification Tips

CONSEILS POUR L’IDENTIFICATION

The burs of Ambrosia species can be distinguished by their relative size and spines or spikes at one end. A. trifida burs are the largest of the genus having spikes at one end with flared bases. Other species have smaller burs, with smaller spines and thinner bur layer. The achene and seed of A. trifida is fragile and rarely seen as the thick bur is not easily broken open.

Additional Botany Information

AUTRES RENSEIGNEMENTS BOTANIQUES

Flowers/Inflorescence

  • 3-35 staminate flowers are clustered into disc-shaped heads on flowering stalks, 1-3 pistillate flowers are clustered at the base of the staminate stalks (Bassett and Crompton 1982)

Vegetative Features

  • The involucral bracts surrounding the female flowers fuse together and harden, becoming a spiny bur enclosing the achene at maturity (FNA 1993+)

Similar Species

ESPÈCES SEMBLABLES

Similar species are based on a study of seed morphology of various species, and those with similar dispersal units are identified. The study is limited by physical specimen and literature availability at the time of examination, and possibly impacted by the subjectivity of the authors based on their knowledge and experience. Providing similar species information for seed identification is to make users aware of similarities that could possibly result in misidentification.

Ambrosia artemisiifolia L. (common ragweed)

A. artemisiifolia burs are smaller (length*: 1.9 – 3.7 mm; width: 1.5 – 2.8 mm), darker coloured, have smaller spines and a thinner bur wall than A. trifida.

*Note: minimum and maximum of 20 burs in a normal range of this species using image measurement (ISMA 2020)

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Reference(s)

Référence(s)

Bassett, I. J. and Crompton, C. W. 1982. The biology of Canadian weeds. 55. Ambrosia trifida L. Canadian Journal of Plant Science. 62: 1003-1010.

Brouillet, L., Coursol, F., Meades, S. J., Favreau, M., Anions, M., Bélisle, P. and Desmet, P. 2010+. VASCAN, the database of vascular plants of Canada. http://data.canadensys.net/vascan/ Accessed October 15, 2020.

Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International (CABI). 2020. Invasive Species Compendium, CAB International, Wallingford, UK. https://www.cabidigitallibrary.org/journal/cabicompendium Accessed October 19, 2020.

Flora of North America (FNA) Editorial Committee, eds. 1993+. Flora of North America North of Mexico [Online]. 22+ vols. New York and Oxford.  http://beta.floranorthamerica.org. Accessed December 29, 2022.

Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) Secretariat. 2022. https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei Accessed via https://www.gbif.org/species/3110588 Accessed December 29, 2022.

Government of Canada (GC). 2016. Canadian Weed Seeds Order. https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/regulations/SOR-2016-93/page-2.html (English) https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/fra/reglements/DORS-2016-93/page-2.html (French)

International Seed Morphology Association (ISMA). 2020. Method for Seed Size Measurement. Version 1.0. ISMA Publication Guide.  https://www.idseed.org/authors/details/method_for_seed_size_measurement.html

Montagnani C., R. Gentili, M. Smith, M. F. Guarino and S. Citterio. 2017. The worldwide spread, success, and impact of ragweed (Ambrosia spp.). Critical Reviews in Plant Sciences 36: 139-178.

Regnier, E., Harrison, S. K., Liu, J., Schmoll, J. T., Edwards, C. A., Arancon, N. and Holloman, C. I. 2008. Impact of an exotic earthworm on seed dispersal of an indigenous US weed. Journal of Applied Ecology 45 (6).

U.S. Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Services (USDA-ARS). 2020. Germplasm Resources Information Network (GRIN), https://npgsweb.ars-grin.gov/gringlobal/taxon/taxonomysimple.aspx Accessed October 13, 2020.

Author(s)

AUTEUR(S)

Jennifer Neudorf, Angela Salzl, Ruojing Wang, Karen Castro, Katrina Entwistle

Canadian Food Inspection Agency