Cineraria is an annual herb with bright yellow flowers. It is a weed of roadsides, fence lines, pastures and riparian areas.
Cineraria is a weed of roadsides, fence lines, pastures and riparian areas.
Cineraria is an annual herb with bright yellow daisy flowers and erect woody stems growing to one metre in height. The leaves are oblong or shaped like a lyre and are 1.5–8 cm long and 5–30 mm wide.
Cineraria is native to southern Africa.
In its native range cineraria grows in a variety of soil types and in a range of habitats, indicating great potential for this species to spread further.
See Using herbicides for more information.
Glyphosate 360 g/L
(Various products)
Rate: 10 mL per 1 L water
Comments: Spot spray. For general weed control in domestic areas (home gardens), commercial, industrial and public service areas, agricultural buildings and other farms situations.
Withholding period: Nil.
Herbicide group: 9 (previously group M), Inhibition of 5-enolpyruvyl shikimate-3 phosphate synthase (EPSP inhibition)
Resistance risk: Moderate
The content provided here is for information purposes only and is taken from the Biosecurity Act 2015 and its subordinate legislation, and the Regional Strategic Weed Management Plans (published by each Local Land Services region in NSW). It describes the state and regional priorities for weeds in New South Wales, Australia.
Area | Duty |
---|---|
All of NSW | General Biosecurity Duty All pest plants are regulated with a general biosecurity duty to prevent, eliminate or minimise any biosecurity risk they may pose. Any person who deals with any plant, who knows (or ought to know) of any biosecurity risk, has a duty to ensure the risk is prevented, eliminated or minimised, so far as is reasonably practicable. |
Reviewed 2021