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History and Impact
Meadow knapweed, from Europe, is a hybrid of black
and brown knapweeds. It is well
adapted to western Washington, where it invades pastures, parks, lawns, industrial sites, tree farms, vacant lands, railroads and roadsides. Its foliage is coarse and tough and not generally palatable to livestock. Meadow knapweed out-competes grasses and
other pasture species and is difficult to control. It threatens wildlife
habitat and causes problems for Christmas tree growers. Knapweed invasions
cause losses averaging up to 63 percent of available grazing forage. Meadow knapweed is also known as Centaurea pratensis, Centaurea × moncktonii and Centaurea
debeauxii subsp. thuillieri. As a Class B
noxious weed, its control is required in King County.
Biology and Morphology
Meadow knapweed favors moist roadsides, sand/gravel
bars and river banks, irrigated pastures, moist meadows, and forest openings.
It is a perennial of the sunflower family (Asteraceae) and grows from
a woody crown. Upright stems branch near the middle, with leaves up to
6 inches long by more than an inch wide. The lower leaves are lobed or
toothed; middle and upper leaves are linear. In King County it flowers
from late May to August, later if it is mowed. Its flower heads are solitary
at tips of the branches. Each is about the size of a nickel, pink to purple,
and much rounder than spotted knapweed heads. Bracts around the flower
head are light to dark brown, with paper-fringed margin, and appear shiny and coppery when flowers are mature. Seeds are about
1/8 inch long, ivory to light brown. A short row of hairs may be present
on one end.
Meadow knapweed photos - click thumbnail for larger image
If you find meadow knapweed in King County, please notify us through our online infestation form.
To find out where we have records of this weed in King County, use our interactive noxious weed map and search for meadow knapweed.
For a fact sheet on identification and control, see our meadow knapweed weed alert. For more detailed information on controlling meadow knapweed in King County, please
see the meadow knapweed best management practices (259 KB Acrobat file, 37 seconds on 56K modem).
For the WA State Written Findings on meadow knapweed, please follow this link to the WA State Noxious Weed Control Board and for information on distinguising between different knapweed, see the informational Selected Knapweeds of Washington (316 KB Acrobat file, 46 seconds on 56K modem).
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