King County Navigation Bar (text navigation at bottom)
Lands Image Water & Land ResourcesGo to Water and Land Resources Division
tansy ragwort - senecio jacobaea
spacer
Program Information
spacer
Weed Information
spacer
Weed Photos
spacer
Weed Lists and Laws
spacer
Integrated Pest Management
spacer
Education and Outreach
spacer
Links
spacer
Home Page
spacer

Tansy ragwort flowers closeup - click for larger imageHistory and Impact
An invader from Europe, tansy ragwort was first seen in seaports in the early 1900's and is often spread in contaminated hay. When prevalent, tansy ragwort is one of the most common causes of poisoning in cattle and horses, caused by consumption of the weed found in pasture, hay or silage. Milk produced by affected cows and goats can contain toxins. Stock does not reject or avoid it in hay or silage; its poisonous alkaloids are unaffected by drying. Honey from tansy ragwort also contains the alkaloids.

Tansy Ragworttansy ragwort rosetteBiology and Morphology
The plant's stem is stout, erect or slightly spreading, and may be branched; often groups of stems arise from the plant crown. A biennial plant, tansy ragwort usually germinates in fall or early winter, lives through the next year as a rosette, then dies the following year after producing flowers and seeds. Its leaves are dark green on top, whitish-green underneath, and have deeply cut, blunt-toothed lobes with a ragged/ruffled appearance. Flower clusters develop on stout, leafy elongated stems that grow up to 6 feet tall; each flower cluster is composed of many bright-yellow flowers with (usually) 13 petals. Its seeds have a white pappus and are wind-carried, resulting in rapid spread of tansy ragwort infestations. A single large plant may produce 150,000 seeds, which may lie dormant in the soil for as long as 15 years. The plant's fibrous system of coarse, light colored roots spreading from the crown can produce small adventitious shoots when stimulated by mechanical destruction or pulling.

As a Class B noxious weed, control is required in King County. For information on tansy ragwort identification and control, please download our tansy ragwort weed alert (793 KB Acrobat file).

For more information about tansy ragwort, please follow this link to the WA State Noxious Weed Control Board.

If you find tansy ragwort 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 Arc IMS Search Tool for tansy ragwort.

Tansy ragwort photos - click thumbnail for larger image

Tansy ragwort leaf closeup - click for larger image tansy ragwort rosette - click for larger image
Tansy ragwort in a woodland - click for larger image tansy comparison - click for larger image tansy ragwort flowers - click for larger image

For more information on tansy ragwort identification and control, please read the Tansy Ragwort Weed Alert (792.8 KB Acrobat file).

For detailed information on controlling tansy ragwort in King County, please read the tansy ragwort best management practices (46 KB Acrobat file).


 
Please direct questions & comments regarding noxious weeds to Program Staff, King County Noxious Weed Control Program.

For questions about the
Water and Land Resources Web Site, please contact Fred Bentler, webmaster.


Department of Natural Resources
Water and Land Resources Division

Updated: April 2, 2007

Related Information:

Agricultural Topics

Go to Yard and Garden Topics


King County | Natural Resources and Parks | Water and Land Resources | News | Services | Comments | Search

Links to external sites do not constitute endorsements by King County.
By visiting this and other King County web pages,
you expressly agree to be bound by terms and conditions of the site.
The details.