mirage

Browsing by Author "Burrill, L. C."

DSpace/Manakin Repository

Browsing by Author "Burrill, L. C."

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Locke, Kerry A.; Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension; United States. Dept. of Agriculture; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service, [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 7/1/1994)
    Bulbous bluegrass is another example of an introduced European plant that escaped to become weedy. The first reports of its growth in the United States were experimental plantings at Arlington, Virginia, in 1907, and ...
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service.; Burrill, L. C. (Corvallis, Or. : Extension Service, Oregon State University, 1988)
  • Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; United States. Dept. of Agriculture; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1992-01)
    Catchweed bedstraw (Galium aparine L.), also called bedstraw or cleavers, is a native annual with weak, climbing, or twining stems, up to 6 feet long (figure 1). Whorls of six to eight narrow single-nerved leaves ...
  • Fitzsimmons, Jim P.; Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; United States. Dept. of Agriculture; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension Service ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1993-03)
    Both grasses were introduced from Europe as meadow grasses, though both have low palatability. Common velvetgrass is a problem in pastures and lawns. It spreads by seed in pastures unless it is mowed regularly to ...
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service.; Aldrich, Susan K.; Burrill, L. C. (Corvallis, Or. : Extension Service, Oregon State University, 1989)
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; Burrill, L. C.; United States. Dept. of Agriculture ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1992-01)
  • Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; United States. Dept. of Agriculture; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1994-09)
    Creeping buttercup (Ranunculus repens L.) probably is the most troublesome of several members of the buttercup family that are weeds in the Pacific Northwest. There are many native species of buttercup in the Pacific ...
  • Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture,, 1992-00-00)
    Curly dock (Rumex crispus L.) is a perennial. It does not have creeping roots or rhizomes (Figure 1). Leaves are oblong to nearly lanceshaped, often 12 inches or more long, with wavy (crisped) margins (Figure 2). Erec ...
  • Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; United States. Dept. of Agriculture; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1992-06)
    Distaff thistle is sometimes called wooly distaff thistle, and in Australia it is Saffron thistle. It is native to the Mediterranean region of Europe and central Europe.
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Extension; University of Idaho. Extension; Burrill, L. C.; Parker, Robert, 1941-; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University, Extension Service, 1994-07)
    The Horsetail (Equisetaceae) family comprises 30 species, all in the ancient genus Equisetum. During the Carboniferous age (more than 230 million years ago), the Horsetail family was the dominant plant group in the world ...
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service.; Burrill, L. C.; Appleby, Arnold P. (Corvallis, Or. : Extension Service, Oregon State University, 1991)
  • Burrill, L. C.; Cardenas, Juan; Locatelli, Eduardo Atilio (Corvallis, Or. : International Plant Protection Center, Oregon State University, 1977)
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; Drake, Joan; Burrill, L. C.; Oregon. State Dept. of Agriculture (Corvallis, Or. : Extension Service, Oregon State University, 1995-01)
  • Burrill, L. C.; Callihan, R. H. (Robert Harold), 1933-; Parker, Robert; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Pullman, WA] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension, 1994-05)
    Poison oak is common in western Oregon and Washington. Its near relative, poison ivy, is found in eastern Oregon and Washington, throughout Idaho, and eastward. Both plants are native to the Pacific Northwest.
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; Burrill, L. C.; French, Ken; Oregon. State Dept. of Agriculture (Corvallis, Or. : Extension Service, Oregon State University, 1989-03)
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; French, Ken; Burrill, L. C.; Butler, Tim, 1958- ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University, Extension Service, 2006-12)
    These thistles are native to Europe and the Middle East. Some are not true thistles; for example, purple/Iberian and yellow starthistle actually are knapweeds. All of these plants, however, share a spiny, thorny, inva ...
  • Fitzsimmons, Jim P.; Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; United States. Dept. of Agriculture; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1993-03)
    Red sorrel (Rumex acetosella) also is known as sheep, horse, field, mountain, and cow sorrel or sour dock. This European weed grows throughout the Pacific Northwest under various soil and climate conditions.
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Extension; University of Idaho. Extension; Hulting, Andrew Gerald; Neff, Karin; Coombs, Eric M.; Parker, Robert, 1941-; Miller, Glenn A.; Burrill, L. C.; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University, Extension Service, 2008-07)
    A bright sign of spring, Scotch broom (Cytisus scoparius) reminds us of its invasive presence each year as many acres of forests, pastures, and rights-of-way burst into golden bloom. Scotch broom is a native of Europe an ...
  • Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Extension; University of Idaho. Extension; Roché, Cindy Talbott; Burrill, L. C.; Pacific Northwest Cooperative Extension ([Covallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service, 1994-09)
    Squarrose knapweed, introduced from southwest Asia and the Middle East, became weedy in northern California and Utah by the early 1950s. How it was originally introduced is not known, but its spread in California and U ...
  • Fitzsimmons, Jim P.; Burrill, L. C.; Oregon State University. Extension Service; Washington State University. Cooperative Extension; University of Idaho. Cooperative Extension System; United States. Dept. of Agriculture ([Corvallis, Or.] : Oregon State University Extension Service ; [Olympia, Wash.] : Washington State University Cooperative Extension ; [Moscow, Idaho] : University of Idaho Cooperative Extension System ; [Washington, D.C.] : U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1993-03)
    St. Johnswort (Hypericum perforatum), also called Klamath weed and goatweed, was introduced from Europe and was found in California about 1900. It was a major pasture weed west of the Cascade mountains from Tacom ...

Search ScholarsArchive@OSU

Browse

My Account