Department of /Agriculture Ca n a da 1906 To...M.'....'k-.'.x -4,£,-fo^>rKX- f-l- This copy of Farm Weeds In Canada, pabiished by direction of the Hon, Sydney A. Fisher, Minister of Agriculture, is presented as a slight recognition of your service in reporting to the Census and SlatisUca Office on the Crops and Lioc Stock of your district during the past year. ^^£. Chkf Offiur. Ollawa, March, 1909. DOMINION OF CANADA Department of Agriculture BRANCH OF THE SEED COMMISSIONER Farm Weeds of Canada BY GEORGE H. CLARK, B.S.A. AND JAMES FLETCHER. LL.D., F.R.S.C, F.L.S. WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY NORMAN CRIDDLE PUBLISHED BY DIRECTION OF THE HON. SYDNEY A. FISHER, MINISTER OF AGRICDLTURE OTTAWA, 1906 Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from Ontario Council of University Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/farmweedsofcanaOOclar To THE HONOUEABLE StDNEY A. FiSHEE, Minister of Agriculture, Ottawa, Canada : Sir, — I have the honour to submit herewith a special bulletin on the farm weeds of Canada^ prepared in accordance with your instructions. The text of this bulletin is by Dr. James Fletcher, Entomologist and Botanist to the Dominion Experimental Farms, and the illustrations were made in water-colour from actual specimens, under his supervision by Mr. Norman Criddle, of Aweme, Man., while employed by the Seed Branch. Incalculable losses are annually sustained by farmers on account of tha prevalence of noxious weeds. The cost of the labour needed to control and eradicate them has become a serious problem in farm management. There are many means by which weeds become disseminated. Weed seeds are carried by the waters of rivers and creeks. Transportation com- panies, especially the railway companies, are responsible for the introduction of many new weeds. The wind and animals of various kinds do much to spread weed seeds in a locality. The results of investigation work conducted by this Branch clearly show that the commerce in agricultural seeds is an exceedingly fruitful medium for the distribution of weeds from field to field and from province to province. In the Seed Laboratory all kinds of seeds are tested free of charge to farmers The reports issued thereon give the names of weed seeds found in the samples sent for test, but the mere names of weeds frequently have no meaning to persons who are not expert in the nomenclature of plants. In consequence most new weeds become introduced and well established before their noxious character is appreciated by farmers. The reference collections of correctly named specimens of weed seeds that are prepared in the Seed Laboratory for distribution to seed merchants and agricultural institutions, are used in the identification of impurities found in commercial seeds. The illustrations of weeds and the information con- tained in this bulletin will make these reference collections of weed seeds more intelligible and serviceable. Since the work of testing seeds for farmers and seed merchants v a« undertaken by this Branch, many applications have been received for a bul- letin containing illustrations of the weeds named in the Seed Control Act and other weeds, the seeds of which were reported to be present in the sam- ples sent for test. It was largely with a view to meet this need on the part of farmers that I suggested to you the preparation of this illustrated bulletin on farm weeds. I recommend that it be printed and distributed, free of charge, on personal application, for use as a reference book in the libraries of farm homes and rural schools. It is a pleasant duty to record the hearty cooperation that I have at all times received from Dr. James Fletcher in compiling reference collections of weed seeds and other work of this Branch, but particularly am I grateful to him for his kindly co-operation and the deep interest he has taken in the preparation of this bulletin. I have the honour to be. Sir, Your obedient servant, GEO. H. CLARK, Seed Commissioner. FARM WEEDS OF CANADA By James Fletchee, Ottawa. IiXTRODUCTORY. The annual losses due to the occurrence of pernicious weeds upon farm lands, although acknowledged in a general way, are far greater than is actually realized. Where, however, a proper course of treatment based upon an accurate knowledge of the nature of each weed is adopted, these losses can be lessened very appreciably. The present time seems to be particularly opportune for urging the need of systematic and united effort on the part of all engaged in the cultivatio:) of the soil, in striving by every means in their power to fight against the in- creasing prevalence of many weeds of the farm. The recent enactment of the Seed Control Act and the very considerable losses to the farmers of the Western Provinces owing to the presence of such a large percentage of foul seeds in the bountiful crop of 1905, have awakened a keen interest, which, it is hoped, will induce a closer study of those general principles which affect the question of the introduction, spread and development of all weeds of the farm, as well as of the methods by which even the worst of these may be eradicated. These methods are all founded on a knowledge of the individual nature of each kind of weed, and there is no weed known which cannot be controlled and cleared from farm lands that are cultivated as they ought to be, with a suitable rotation of crops and with the ordinary implements now in use by Canadian farmers. The subject of farm weeds and their eradication is now one of burning interest to all cultivators of the soil in every part of the Dominion. This interest is shown by frequent enquiries for the correct names and nature of any strange plants found growing among crops, and for advice as to the best means of controlling them. During the past ten years several official bul- letins on weeds have been issued and widely distributed. In all of these publications the same names are given for the different weeds. It is, there- fore, clearly important that those for whose benefit the bulletins have been prepared, should know the plants treated of by the names there used, so that they may be able to make the fullest use of the information supplied. In the fight against noxious weeds, the first thing of importance is to know a weed when seen and to call it by its true name, not necessarily its botanical name, but the name by which it is generally known and written about in agricultural publications. Local names, unfortunately, are very often wrong. There are, for instance, at least half a dozen plants of quite different habits, which are locally known under the name of "Russian Thistle"; "Ragwort" is a name applied to several plants; "Black Mustard", again, is used for two or three troublesome plants of the Mustard family, whereas the trtie Black Mustard is seldom seen in Canada, and has nowhere appeared as a farm pest. "Chicory", "Milkweed" and "Bindweed" are names applied to many different plants. It cannot be made too widely known that anyone wishing to learn the names or nature of plants found on hi? 5 land can send specimens pest free to the Botanist of the Experimental Farm, at Ottawa : and full information about the plant will be forwarded to the gender gladly and free of all charge, with as little delay as possible. It is always better to send specimens when making enquiries, because so many weeds are locally known by wrong names. Therefore, if information is asked about a certain plant under a wrong name, it is very probable that the treatment suggested may not be suitable. Farmers give very little critical attention to the different weeds growing among their crops. Some think that, because these plants are in a measure unfamiliar, the exact recognition of all of them is a matter beyond their power. This, however, is by no means the case, and, as the different kinds vary greatly in their powers of robbing the farmer, it is certainly advisable that more attention should be given to weed pests than has been done in the past. Although there are several hundreds of different kinds of plants growing wild in almost every locality and many of these may sometimes appear among cultivated crops, there are only a few which a farmer need trouble about — not many more than there are different kinds of crops grown ; and every cultivator of the soil knows the difference between wheat, barley, oats, rye, peas, turnips, beets, etc. It is no more difficult, if the importance of the subject is recognized, to learn the names, nature and appearance at different stages of growth, and also the seeds of Stinkweed, Hare's-ear Mus- tard, False-flax, Canada Thistle, Field Sowthistle, Sweet Grass, Quack, etc., than to recognize the familiar plants which have been grown for many years as crops. What is a Weed? There are many definitions of the word Weed, but perhaps from a far- mer's standpoint the best one is: "any injurious, troublesome, or unsightly plant that is at the same time useless or comparatively so." As a general statement, it may be said that our most troublesome and aggressive weeds of the farm have been introduced into Canada from other countries : but it is also true that under special circumstances some of our native wild plants may in- crease and become "noxious weeds." Losses due to Weeds. That the losses due to the presence of weeds upon cultivated land are enormous, is generally understood ; but it may not be amiss here to draw special attention to some of the ways in which these enemies injure the tiller of the soil. 1. Weeds do great harm by robbing the soil of the plant food intended for the crop and also of its moisture, thus increasing the effects of drought by taking up water from the soil and wasting it by evaporation. 2. Weeds crowd out and take the place of more useful plants, being hardier, and, as a rule, more prolific. 3. Weeds are a source of great loss. From the time farmers begin to prepare their land for a crop, these enemies increase the cost of every opera- tion— in ploughing, harrowing, seeding, cultivating, cutting, binding, carry- ing and threshing, as well as in cleaning, freighting and marketing the produce. Direct losses are the larger consumption of binder twine necessary when weedy grain crops are harvested, and the extra wear and tear on machinery due to coarse-growing weeds. 4. The eradication of the worst weeds is costly in labour, time and machinery and frequently compels a farmer to change what would be the best rotation of crops for the land, or even to grow crops which are not the most advantageous. 5. Alany weeds are conspicuous and all are unsightly on farm lands. They thus, in a varying degree according to their several natures, depreciate the value of land, a point which may be of great importance, should the owner wish to sell. 6. Some weeds are injurious to stock, being poisonous as the Water Hemlock, or injurious to their products as burs in wool, or Wild Garlic and Stinkweed, which taint milk. The horny or barbed seeds of some grasses cause irritation or painful wounds by penetrating the flesh and particularly the mouth parts, as Porcupine Grass and Skunk-tail Grass in the North-west. 7. Weeds attract injurious insects or harbour fungous diseases, which may spread to cultivated plants. It is well known that weedy stubbles or summer-fallows are a breeding ground for cutworms and that the rust of small grains may pass the winter on several kinds of grasses. In view of the above, it must be acknowledged that in all parts of Can- ada weeds are a source of constant and very considerable loss to farmers. Indeed, so much is this the case that the great prevalence of some varieties in certain districts of the Dominion must be viewed with the gravest alarm, for they have taken such possession of the land as to seriously affect profit- able farming. As examples of such aggressive enemies, mention may be made of the Wild Mustard, Quack or Couch Grass and Canada Thistle in parts of almost every province ; Ox-eye Daisy in the Maritime Provinces ; Field Sowthistle in the Maritime Provinces, Quebec, Ontario and the Red River valley in Manitoba; and Stinkweed or Penny-cress, Ball Mustard and Hare's-ear Mustard in all the Prairie Provinces. The increase of weeds in a district has frequently been due to the fact that farmers have neglected them from not being aware of their noxious nature and power to spread. "Many of our farmers have only a limited knowledge of weeds, and in many cases do not recognize those that are dangerous on their first appear- ance. Hence we have 'One year's seeding, seven years weeding.' There are some weeds so noxious that, if farmers knew their real character and recognized the plants on their first appearance, they would postpone all other business until they were destroyed. • • • Self-interest should be a sufficient incentive to farmers to destroy weeds if it is clearly shown that it will pay them to do so." — H. MacKellar. A point of considerable importance with regard to noxious weeds is the. adoption, as much as possible, of some one English or common name. The names used in this bulletin have been selected with much care as being those which are most applicable and most widely known. When more names than one are given, the first is preferable. The scientific names, of which only one for each plant is recognized as authoritative by botanists all over the world, are here given, so that the certain identity of each plant mentioned may be known. Few farmers, of course, are acquainted with these scientific terms, even in the case of our commonest weeds, but it would be well if they were ; for certainly much confusion exists in different localities in the ap- plication even of the English popular names, the same plant being frequently called by one name in one place and by quite a different name elsewhere, or quite as frequently a single name is applied to a number of distinct plants in different places or by different people in the same place. How Weeds Speead. In the present age of extensive and easy communication with ail parts of the country, and indeed with the whole world, there are frequent oppor- tunities for seeds of weeds being introduced into previously uninfested dis- tricts. There are many ways in which weeds are spread : — 1. By natural agencies. The wind carries the seeds long distances not only in sum^mer but with drifting soil and over the surface of the snow in winter. Streams distribute them far and wide along their courses. They are also distributed by seed-eating birds and herbivorous animals, through the stomachs of which the seeds have passed undigested, or by being attached to some part of their bodies by special contrivances, with which nature has provided some seeds for this very purpose, such as hooked and barbed hairs, spines, gummy excretions, etc. 2. By human agency. The seeds of weeds are frequently introduced as "foul seed" mixed with other seeds, particularly in cheap, improperly cleaned seed; they are also brought on to previously clean farms with ma- nure from towns or are imported in hay used for packing or as fodder. In addition to this, they are often distributed over farms by waggons, harrows, seeders, threshing machines or other agricultural implements. As an offset against the great benefits we derive from railways, it has been found that many bad weeds have been introduced into new localities through their agency, the seeds being either shaken from cars or cleaned out of them at stopping places. A fact, however, which should not be forgotten, is that the railway companies do not grow these weed seeds themselves. They are merely the carriers for farmers and would far rather handle grain perfectly free from weed seeds of all kinds than such as contains a possible source of injury to a new district, in the prosperity and progress of which they are interested. It is most important to keep a close watch on all railway banks and station yards so as to detect and destroy any new weeds which may appear, before they spread to the surrounding country. Classific.itiox of Weeds. Weeds, like all other plants, may be simply classified according to the length of time they live, under the three following heads: — Annuals, or one-year plants: Biennials, or two-year plants: and Perennials, or many- year plants. In eradicating weeds, it is of the greatest importance to consider under which of these heads they come, because in most instances the treat- ment is simple and will be upon the general principles of preventing annuals and biennials from seeding, and perennials from forming new leaves, roots and underground stems. ANNr.^LS. — Are those plants which complete their whole growth in a year. As a rule they have small fibrous roots and produce a large quantitv of seed. Examples of this class are found in Wild Mustard, Stinkweed, Lamb's-quarters. Wild Buckwheat, Purslane, Ragweed. Wild Oats. There are also some annuals called "Winter Annuals," which are not only true annuals when the seeds germinate in spring, but are also biennial in habit, that is, their seeds ripened in the summer fall to the ground, germinate and produce a certain growth before winter sets in and then complete their development the next spring. Of these may be mentioned Shepherd's-purse, Peppererass, Stinkweed. mentioned above.' Wormseed Mustard. Ball Mus- tard. Hare's-ear Mustard, Canada Flea-banc, and the Blue Bur. Biennials. — Are those plants which require two seasons to complete their growth, the first being spent in collecting and storing up a supply of nourishment, which is used the second season in producing flowers and seeds. Examples of these are Burdock, False-tansy, Common Evening-prim- rose and Viper's Bugloss or Blue-weed. Perennials — Are those plants which continue growing for manj' years. Perennial weeds are propagated in several ways, but all produce seeds as well. They have two distinct modes of growth, those which root deeply, and those of which the the root system is near the surface. The most trouble- some are those which extend long underground stems deep beneath the sur- face of the ground, as Canada Thistle, Perennial or Field Sowthistle, Field Bindweed, Bladder Campion, White-stemmed Evening-primrose, Showy Let- tiice, and some wild Sunflowers. Representatives of the second class or shal- low-rooted perennials are : Pasture Sage, Yarrow and Couch Grass. Some perennials extend but slowly from the root by means of short stems or offsets, but produce a large quantity of seed. Of these. Ox-eye Daisy, Dan- delion, Goldenrod and Yarrow are examples. Extermination of Weeds. In adopting a method of extermination, the nature of the plant to be eradicated and its habits of growth must, first of all, be taken into considera- tion. Annuals. — Anj' method by which the germination of the seed in the soil is hastened and the young plants afterwards destroyed before they produce fresh seed, must in time clean land however badly infested it may be with annual weeds. The seeds of some annuals have great vitality, and will con- tinue appearing for several years as fresh seeds are brought up to the surface by cultivation. Wild Mu.stard seeds have been known to germinate after lying deep in the ground for twenty years, and the same vitality has been claimed for Wild Oats, with, however, less satisfactory evidence. Biennials must be either ploughed up or cut down before they flower. Mowing at short intervals in the second year, so as to prevent the formation of new seed, will clear the land of this class of plants ; but a single mowing will only induce them to send out later branches, which, if not cut, will mature many seeds. Where ploughing is impracticable, this class of plants should be cut off below the crown of the root. For this purpose, a spud or a large chisel at the end of a long handle (to obviate the necessity of stoop- ing) is as convenient a tool as can be used. Perennials are by far the most troublesome of all weeds and require very thorough treatment, in some instances the cultivation of special crops, to ensure their eradication. Imperfect treatment such as a single ploughing, frequently does more harm than good, by breaking up the underground stems and stimulating growth. It will be found in examining several perennial plants that they may be divided into two classes, one of which has its root svstem close to the sur- face, of the soil, while the other roots very deeply. For the shallow-rooted perennials, infested land should be either trenched deeply or ploughed so lightly that the roots are exposed to the sun to dry up. For deep-rooted per- ennials, on the other "hand, ploughing should be as deep as conveniently pos- sible without going to extra expense. The depth of ploughing must be de- cided by the nature of the land. In light or gravelly soils shallow ploughing may be preferable, as too deep ploughing would interfere with the mechanical texture of the soil, which is so important in the movement of soil moisture. Some method of cultivation must be adopted, such as the use of a broad- shared cultivator, to cut off at short intervals all freshly formed shoots an inch or two beneath the surface of the soil, so as to prevent the plants from forming leaves and thus storing up nourishment to sustain future growth. Plants take in most of their food through their leaves. Perennial plants, which live for many years, have special reservoirs where some of this food after elaboration is stored up for future use in such receptacles as bulbs, tubers and fleshy rootstocks. The first growth in spring, particul- arly flowering stems, are produced mainly by drawing on this special store of nourishment. Plants are therefore in their weakest condition, at that time of the year when they have exhausted to the greatest extent their supply of reserve food, and have not had time to replenish it. The stage of growth, then, when ploughing down of perennial plants will be of most effect, is just when their flowering stems have made their full growth, but before the seeds, which would be a source of danger, have had time to mature. Some experience is necessary to know what is the best time to work certain soils or to deal with special weeds, as well as to recognize weeds in all their stages. Some weeds, the Russian Thistle and Stinkweed for instance, have a very different appearance when young and when mature. No general rule can be given, as the necessary treatment will vary in different districts on different soils and under different climatic conditions. What may be the proper treat- ment in one place, may fail in another. Perennial plants, if allowed to de- velop flower stems and then ploughed down (or first mowed and then ploughed under), will, by the production of the flower stems, have so far reduced the nourishment stored up in the rootstocks that they are much weakened and can afterwards be easily dealt with by two or three cultivations before win- ter sets in. Late fall ploughing has also been found extremely useful in Manitoba in cleaning land infested by some of the worst perennial weeds, such as Canada Thistle and Field Sowthistle. On the other hand, it has been found in the West that all the weeds and other plants decay readily if prairie lands or meadows are broken in May or early in June. Land so treated can therefore be cleaned far more easily than if the operation of breaking is delayed until July. This is due to the climate and to the suc- culent nature of all parts of the plant at that season. General Principles. 1. There is no weed Icnoivn tchich cannot he eradicated by constant at- tention, if only the nature of its growth he understood. 2. Never allow weeds to ripen seed. 3. Cultivate freqiiently, particularly early in the season, so as to de- stroy seedlings while small and easily killed. 4. Many weed seeds can be induced to germinate in autumn by cul- tivating stubbles immediately after harvest. Many of the seedlings would be killed by winter or could be easily disposed of by ploughing or cultivatiou in spring. 6. All weeds bearing mature seeds should be burnt, and under no cir- cumstances should they be ploughed under. 6. All weeds can be destroyed by the use of the ordinary implements of the farm, the plough, the cultivator, the .spud and the hoe. 7. Be constantly on the alert to prevent new weeds from becoming estab- lished on farms. Notwithstanding all efforts to the contrary, weeds will certainly bo introduced from time to time even on the f;irnis of the most careful. 10 Summer-Fallowing. Summer-fallowing as an agricultural practice, although not now fol- lowed to the same extent as formerly in the older provinces, owing to the more general adoption of mixed farming with a short rotation, in which hoed crops are most useful in cleaning the land of weeds, is essentially necessary in those parts of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, where the conser- vation of moisture in the soil is of great importance, the farms are large, labour is scarce and the time for cultivating the land in autumn and spring is limited. The method of summer-fallowing recommended is : to plough deeply (so as to get a suitable seed bed) early in summer as soon after seeding as . possible ; harrow the same day the ploughing is done, so as to hold in the largest amount of moisture, and then prevent a growth of weeds on this land by three or at most four cultivations before winter sets in. This may be done with any kind of cultivator or a disk harrow. It is recommended for most parts of the West to summer-fallow land once in three years. Plough and cultivate the first year. Grow grain the second year and, except in the driest districts, take one crop more off stubble. Then summer-fallow again. One ploughing of summer-fallow gives the best results, because in wet years a second deep ploughing will tend to produce too much growth and delay the ripening of the grain. Crops grown on stubble do not yield quite so well as on summer-fallow, but the grain ripens earlier and in windy sections tliere is less danger of the soil drifting. A second crop should never be sowti on stubble. There has been a tendency in some parts of the West to put off the ploughing of land to be summer- fallowed, as long as possible, so as to reduce the subsequent labour of har- rowing and cultivating. The danger, however, of ploughing down seeds of several kinds of winter annuals, which in the dry climate of Manitoba and the North-western Provinces are sufiB.ciently developed to ripen after being ploughed down, is so great that, as recommended by Mr. Angus Mackay, the work should be begun directly after seeding is finished. Short Eotation of Chops. As a means of keeping farms free of weeds there are few methods of working land which give such good results as a systematic short rotation of crops with regular seeding down to grass or clover at short intervals. In the Prairie Provinces mixed farming has not yet been very widely adopted. This has been largely due to local considerations, such as inade- quate transportation facilities, lack of farm laborers, and the small amount of stock kept on farms, added to the undoubted attractiveness of the quick returns from growing wheat for a man with limited capital, who does not think enough of the rapid exhaustion of his soil from growing one kind of crop year after year. The increase of weeds, however, is Nature's pro- test against a one-year system. Nevertheless, at the present time great progress is noticeable in the West, in seeding down more land to hay and pasture and in increasing the number of cattle, horses and sheep, necessary to consume crops of a mixed nature. The following short rotation is recommended for the East by Mr. J. H. Grisdale, Agriculturist of the Cen- tral Experimental Farm: — "To destroy weeds, probably the best rotation possible is one of three years' duration including clover and mixed hay, followed by roots or corn, the land shallow-ploughed in fall and sown to grain the next spring with ten pounds of red clover and twelve pounds of timothy per acre. (When the land is heavy or clayey, the ten pounds of 11 red clover may be replaced by six pounds of red clover and two of alsike.) If a portion of the arable land' must be used for pasture, then the land might be allowed to remain under grass or hay for two years instead of one year, the second being used for pasture, thus extending the three-year into a four- year rotation. The pasture land in the four-year rotation, or the hay land in the three-year rotation, should be broken up early in August and culti- vated at intervals to destroy the successive growths of weeds as they appear. The land should be again ploughed or preferably ridged in the fall. These rotations may be expected to give good results anywhere in Canada east of Manitoba." Seedi>g Down. The prevention of seed production bj' weeds is of the greatest import- ance when cleaning land for a crop. A iiseful way of choking out many perennial weeds and also of holding in check many annuals, is to seed down to grass or clover. This does not kill the seeds of all the different kinds of weeds which may be in the soil ; but it prevents many weed seeds from being produced upon land which for one reason or another cannot be carefully worked. When the sod is broken up again, the seeds of some kinds will germinate and the plants become noticeable. In the same way that weeds crowd out crops and reduce the yield, so may weeds themselves be choked out by more vigorous plants which will prevent them from getting light and air, and thus weaklings are produced which bear only a few seeds in- stead of strong and vigorous plants which would produce perhaps many thousands, or even hundreds of thousands. Seeding down is always a wise practice on land which is not being used for some special crop, and is Nature's own plan for keeping up the fertility of the soil and preventing an undue preponderance of any one kind of plant. Weeders and Habrows. For the destruction of the seedlings of all kinds of weeds upon light land comparatively free of roots and stones, but which has been sown to grain crops for several years in succession, I know of nothing so effective as the working of the surface of fields of growing grain after the plants are three inches high, with the implements called Weeders, which deserve to be in much more general use than they are. In lieu of these, light harrows with sloped teeth may be used to advantage. The field should be dragged in the same direction as the drills. This work of course should only be done when the land is in the proper condition for harrowing. If fields are har- rowed before the grain is three inches high, some of the plants are apt to be covered up too deeply; but after that stage of growth they are very much benefited by the operation, which not only kills all of the small weak seed- lings of weeds which have germinated near the surface of the soil, without dragging out or in any way injuring the grain plants, but at the same time breaks up the surface of the soil. This benefits the crop so treated in exactly the same way as crops of corn or potatoes are helped by harrowing, as it forms on the surface a mulch of dry dust which holds in moisture. A single harrowing is generally sufficient: but, if necessary, the operation may be repeated two or three times and until the plants are six inches high. For such persistent annual weeds as Stinkweed, the various kinds of Mustard and Lamb's-quarters, the use of weeders or harrows as above recommended, IS undoubtedly tlie most economical and in every way the best method of control. 12 Weeds not "Natural to the Soil." It may not be amiss to refer to a widespread, although not always acknowledged, misconception on -the part of some of our cultivators of the soil. Not a few people believe that weeds are what they term "Natural to the soil," by which they mean that these plants can arise in some way by spontaneous generation from the soil in places where they have not been sown and where there are no seeds. This is absolutely erroneous. No plant can ever begin to grow, except from a seed or from a piece of a similar plant in the ground. The appearance of weeds on land which has been cleaned, is due to the enormous number of seeds produced by some plants which have become weeds, and to the numerous ways in which these can be carried by the elements or otherwise transported to an adjoining piece of land, where, if the conditions of growth are favourable they flourish. The plants which have developed into noxious weeds, are those which have the greatest powers of propagating themselves and which are of robust habit and are better able to care for themselves than the plants we grow as crops, most of which are of exotic origin and of improved strains, such as are not able to hold their own unless cared for and helped by man. If plants could come into existence by spontaneous generation, the various kinds would be more evenly distributed; but, in the case of even our worst weeds, we know in many instances when and by what means they have been introduced into new districts, which would not be the case if they could spring up spontan- eously from the soil. Clean Seed. Too much stress cannot be laid on the economy of using well cleaned seed for all crops, even if what seems to be a very high price has to be paid for it. It is undoubtedly the case that many weeds occur in crops, which can only be there from the seed having been sown with the crop seed. Ex- amples of these are Chess in fall wheat, and Darnel and Cockle in spring wheat. The spread of weeds into new localities is almost entirely due to their having been introduced with seed brought from another district. The old idea that there was a great advantage in getting a change of seed from another farm or district, or from a crop grown on different soil, has been responsible for the bringing in of many troublesome weeds to farms where previously they were unknown. Many Canadian farmers are appreciating this, and more of them every year are adopting the wise plan of growing their own seed grain, carefully selected to a desired type, upon a plot of land specially prepared and kept clean for the purpose. The value of such work and the willingness on the part of farmers to pay a reasonable price, although apparently a high one, for good seed, clean, true to variety and type, and well matured, have given rise to that most useful organization, the Canadian Seed Growers' Association. The institution of such a plan of securing high class seed will affect the condition of the whole of a man's farm; for he will have an eloquent object lesson of what large yields may be produced by careful work on a small area, and also how much larger monetary returns may be secured in his whole crop by adopting similar measures. This has actually been the case with members of the Seed Growers' Association. The Seeds of Weeds. As so many weeds are introduced into new localities by their seeds being 8own mixed with crop seeds, it is of the utmost importance that those who purchase seed from dealers should know how to recognize the seeds of the various kinds of these agricultural pests. Every farmer should know by 13 sight the seeds of the fifteen or twenty worst weeds which are likely to be found among the seeds of cereals, clovers and grasses, as well as among some garden seeds. He should always examine for himself all crop seeds he buys, no matter what guarantee of purity he may get from the sellers. The seeds of most weeds are small and therefore it is necessary to examine them through a magnifying glass. A suitable glass, however, for this purpose can be purchased anywhere for twenty-five or fifty cents. All of the weed seeds have characteristic shapes, colours and markings, by which, after a little practice, they are just as easily recognized as the crop seeds among which they occur. For ease of reference, it has been thought best to arrange the plants treated of in this bulletin in their natural botanical order, as given in Prof. Macoun's Catalogue of Canadian Plants. Where necessary, a short account has also been given of the different families of plants. In the descriptive matter accompanying each plate will be found a care- ful description, giving the salient points by which the seed of each plant represented may be recognized ; and at the end of the volume are given some plates showing these seeds, both of their natural size and also much enlarged so as to show the same seed as it appears under the ordinary pocket magnify- ing glass. In addition to the seeds of the plants figured and described, representations are also given of some other weed seeds which are likely to be found among crop seeds offered for sale in the market or which are likely to occur among crops grown by farmers in Canada. Each kind of seed on the plates is well represented in colours and is plainly marked with that name which is best known to the largest number of people interested, or which is used over the widest area of country. It is hoped that- these will be useful to the large number of farmers, seedsmen and students, who are direct- ing much more attention than formerly to this important subject. Botanical Terms Explained. In treating of the various weeds mentioned in this bulletin, it will be necessary for the sake of brevity to make occasional use of a few botanical terms which may not be familiar to all. A list of these is given below with explanations. Achene — A dry one-seeded fruit in a hard close-fitting shell which opens only when burst by the germinating seed. Anther — See Stamen. Apical Scar — The mark on a fruit, where the style or stigma was attached. Axil — The angle between a leaf and a stem. Basal Scar — The mark on a fruit, where it was attached to the peduncle, or on a seed where it was attached to the seed vessel. Bract — A small leaf bearing a flower in its axil. Calyx — The outer set of leaves in a flower. Compound — Composed of several similar parts. Corolla — The inner set of leaves in a flower, generally coloured. Corymb — A raceme in which the footstalks are gradually lengthened from the apex downwards, so that all the flowers are brought to the same level or nearly so. Cyme — A panicle with the footstalks so developed or contracted as to form a flat-topped head, the central flowers generally blooming first ; examples : Elder, Dogwood. Dentate — With toothed edges. 14 Embryo — The rudimentary plant contained in a seed. Entire — Not toothed. Filament — See Stamen. Fruit — The matured ovary and its contents, together with any appen- dages of the flower which seem to form an integral part, as the calyx of an Apple or a Rose. Head — When numerous flowers are arranged upon a disk or receptacle ; examples : Ox-eye Daisy, Clover. Involucre — A circle of bracts round a flower or flower-head. Irregular — -With some of the parts different in size or shape. Lobed — Divided to about the middle. Ovary — See Pistil. Panicle — A compound raceme, or a raceme with branched footstalks; example : Oats. Pedicel — The stalk of a flower in a cluster. Peduncle — The stalk of a flower. Petals — The separate parts of a corolla. Petiole — The stalk of a leaf. Pinnate — Feather-like, having leaflets on each side of a main stalk. Pinnatifid — Cut like a pinnate leaf. Pistil — The female organ of a flower, composed of the ovary, which contains the seed, the stigma, a soft viscid part of the pistil which receives the pollen grains, and the style, which supports the stigma. Pollen — See Stamen. Pubescent — Downy. Eaceme — Like a spike but with the flowers borne upon footstalks of an equal and of a noticeable length ; example : Lily-of-the-Valley. Radicle — The first root that comes from a seed. Regular — With the parts uniform in size and shape. Rootstock — A creeping stem below the surface of the ground. Runciuate — Having the teeth of a leaf directed towards the base. Scarious — Membranous. Seed — The embryo with its covering, if this is not part of the ovary. Sepals — The separate parts of the calyx. Sessile — Without a footstalk. Spatulate — Expanded above and narrowed at the base. Spike — When the flowerstalks are very short or wanting on a long cylin- drical flower-cluster. Stamen — Tlie male organ of a flower composed of the anther, which holds the fertilizing pollen grains, and the support called the fila^ merit. Stellate— Shaped like a star. Stigma — See Pistil. Stipule — A small leafv expansion of the base of a petiole. Style— See Pistil. Truncate — Cut off abruptly. Umbel — When the flowers are stipported upon footstalks rising from the summit of a general footstalk; example: Geranium. If each of the footstalks of an umbel bears a secondary umbel as in the Carrot, it is a compound timhel. In Botany the word fruit signifies the enlarged and matured ovary, whatever its substance may be and whether fit to eat or not. In the small fruits of many weeds it is sometimes difficult to decide whether these are 15 fruits 01 true seeds. In the Buttercup, Sunflower, Borage, and Mint families, the seed-like bodies are really fruits, while in the Mustard, Pink, Pea and Evening-primrose families they are true seeds. In descri- bing the weeds in the present publication, it seems wise to speak of all of these as seeds, which is the term commonly used by seedsmen, farmers and others ; but in the short notices of the Families of Plants the true nature is men- tioned. Dr. L. H. Grindon, the eminent English botanist in his "British and Garden Botany" makes the following concise distinction: "There is an infallible distinction between a fruit and a seed, however much they may resemble each other: — the fruit always has a scar at the base, showing where it was attached to the peduncle, and another upon the summit, indicat- ing the former presence of the style or stigma ; but the seed has never more than one scar, indicating the point at which it was connected with the pod that contained it." Certain of the worst weeds have been legislated against by the Dominion Parliament or by the provincial legislatures. These are all mentioned in ihia bulletin, and the province in which they have been proclaimed noxious is indicated under each species after the word Noxious as follows : — Noxious : Dom., Ont., Man., N. W., B. C. — meaning that laws have been passed by the Dominion and the provinces mentioned, looking to the destruction of the weed in the field or to the elimination of the seeds from crop seeds offered for sale. Conclusion. It should be remembered that all kinds of weeds can be kept tmder control on land worked properly and under a short rotation of crops, with the ordinary implements of the farm, used at regular time. Many of the recommendations made in this bulletin are special measures for cleaning land which has become badlv infested bv certain weeds. 16 THE BUTTERCUP FAMILY, RANUNCULACE/E. The Buttercup family contains a few weeds of secondary importance, as the Tall Buttercup, Ranunculus acris, L., which occurs in almost every part of the Dominion, and the Creeping Crowfoot, Ranunculus repens, L., whiih is troublesome in pastures in the Maritime Provinces, and is also found in other districts. Both are perennials which are acrid and irritating to the mouths of stock when eaten in a fresh state, but lose their noxious qualities when made into hay! The Cursed Crowfoot, Ranunculus sceleratus, L., is so acrid that the juice will blister the skin. The Sea-side Crowfoot, Ranun- culus Cymhalaria, Pursh, has been suspected of poisoning stock in the North- west. The flowers in this family are either regular or irregular; the fruits are very variable, and the seeds may be contained in berries, in dry pods, or in achenes, which are small, separate, seed-like dry fruits, containing a single seed in a hard, close-fitting shell which does not open of itself, but remains closed until burst by the germinating seed. In the division of the family to which the true buttercups belong, the fruit is a head made up of several achenes. Tlie seeds (achenes) of several kinds of Buttercup may be found in commercial grass seeds and are [Plate 55, fig. 42 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] mostly flattened, somewhat oval in outline, pointed at one end, dark coloured and margined, from one-tweltfh to one-eighth of an inch across. None of the species of Butter-cup are deep-rooted, and all can be controlled by breaking up the pastures and re-*eeding to grass. In this family there are also some virulently poisonous plants, as the Larkspurs {Del- phinium) and Monkshoods (Aconitum) of the western plains. The Crocus Anemone, Anemone patens, L., var. Nuttalliana, Gray, has been the cause of losses in flocks of sheep. Owing to its earliness in flowering and its succulence, the hairy stems are eaten in quantity and the copious hairs, remaining undigested, form balls in the stomachs of the sheeji. The White or Peunsylvaniau Anemone, Ancnidiie canadensis, L., sometimes in- creases so much in low pastures that it crowds out the grasses and necessitates the breaking up of the sod. The seed [Plate 55, fig. 41 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] is sometimes found with the seeds of grasses. At figure 42, on the same plate, is the seed of the Tall Buttercup, a common impurity in the seeds of the coarser grasses, [li natural size and enlarged 4 times.] THE FUMITORY FAMILY, FUMARIACE.E. An occasional weed in the wheat fields of Manitoba is the Golden Fumi- tory, Corydalis aurea, Willd. This plant sometimes appears in low land and in restricted areas, in such numbers as to crowd out grain crops sown on stubble. It is a succulent biennial with golden-yellow irregular flowers, the seeds [Plate 55, fig. 43 — twice nat. size and enlarged 4 times] are shining black, rounded-kidney-shaped, about one-twelfth of an inch across, borne in one-celled, square, somewhat knotty, curved pods which split down one side to shed the seeds. Spring or fall plowing or the disking of stubbles before cowing will clear them of this weed. THE MUSTARD FAMILY, CRUCIFER.E. There are few orders of plants of so great economic importance as the Mustard family, not only from the large number of troublesome weeds it (2 w.) 17 contains, but also from the fact that not a single unwholesome plant is found in it. ]tlany species form well known and excellent articles of food, as the cabbage, turnip, radish, watercress, etc. Some of our worst weeds, however, most of which have been introduced into Canada, belong to this family. The characters of the family are easily recognized. The flowers are regular, com- posed of four free sepals and four free petals, arranged in two opposite pairs and forming a cross-shaped flower, from which the whole family takes its name, Cruciferce. The flowers are borne on footstalks (pedicels), and clust- ered at the tips of branches which gradually elongate, forming long, upright racemes, with, often, fully-formed and even ripe pods below, before the top- most flowers have opened. When ripe the seed pods, which are of various shapes, in nearly all instances, consist of two outside walls separated by a thin white partition, to the two sides of which the seeds are attached. The seeds are, as a rule, small and very numerous. Their surface is usually rather dull, more or less granular, and many, when placed in water, develop gelatinous hairs and mucilage, by which, when they dry, they remain attached to passing objects or adjacent surfaces. This constitutes an import- ant factor in their distribution. The quantity of mucilage varies. On some seeds it remains after drying as a covering of hair-like points or threads. The seed-coat is generally thin and close-fitting, the shape of the embryo plant showing plainly through it. The position taken by the folded up embryo inside the seed is often a great help in identifying the seeds of weeds. The seed leaves and radicle inside the seeds of crucifers take one of four characteristic positions : 1. Accumbent, when the radicle lies along the edges of the seed leaves, as in Stinkweed, from a Latin word accumbo, meaning to lie at the side. 2. Incumbent, when the radicle lies down the back of one of the seed leaves, as in Shepherd 's-purse. Common Pepper-grass and Hare's-ear Mus- tard, from a Latin word incumho, meaning to lie on the back. 3. Oblique, when the radicle lies slantingly across the edges of the seed leaves, as in the Prairie Wallflowers. 4. Conduplicate, when the radicle lies on the back of one of the seed leaves and these are folded sideways over it, as in the Mustard, Eadish, etc. Many of the Crucifers have in the roots, stems or seeds recognizable odours or flavours, which help in identifying them. The leaves and stems of many bear small star-shaped hairs. The best known or most noxious mem- bers of the Mustard family are treated of separately and figured, others which might be confounded with them will be referred to in the text, and the chief differences pointed out. Closely allied with the Mustard family is the Caper family (Cappari- dacece), which has some important characters in common with it, such as cross-shaped flowers, seeds in pods, but these without partitions, and often having acrid or pungent juice. The chief differences between the two families are that in the Mustard family, four of the six stamens are long and two short, while in the Caper family all six are equal, and the pod of the former is two-celled, being divided by a thin partition across the middle. The curious seeds [Plate 55, fig. 47 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] of the Entire-leaved SnnER-FLOWER, CJeome integrifolin, T. & G., of this family are sometimes found in western wheat. These seeds are roiinded-wedge-shape or elongated-kidnoy-shape, with a deep curved groove running up each face two-thirds of the way to the top from just above the sharp-pointed base. These seeds, when ripe, are dark brown, roughened with pale, scurfy ex- crescences; the dried tinripe seeds are yellowish. 2a w. 18 Plate I WORM-Se&D MUSTARD (Erysimum cheiranfhoides./..) PLATE 1. WORMSEED MUSTARD, Erysimum chehanlhoides, L. Other English name: Treacle Mustard. (Noxious: N.W.) Native. Annual and winter annual. Stems erect, simple or branch- ing, six inches to two feet high. Dark green ; whole plant sometimes slightly hoary with very short star-like hairs. Leaves, lance-shaped, sparsely toothed. Flowers bright yellow, one-fifth inch across, in terminal clusters about one inch across, on gradually elongating racemes. Seed pods slightly curved from half an inch to one inch long, obtusely four-angled, erect on spreading pedicels. Each pod contains about twenty-five seeds. An aver- age plant will ripen about 25,000 seeds. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 1 — twice nat. size and enlarged 8 times], variable in size and shape, many being pointed at one end, rounded at the other, about J^ of an inch long, reddish yellow, with a dull surface, but almost destitute of mucilage. Scar end darkened. Uadicle conspicuous and incumbent, that is lying down the back of one of the seed leaves, which are plainly recognizable in the dry seed. The taste of the seeds is very bitter, which renders them unpalatable to stock, and it is claimed by some feeders that they are very injurious. This conten- tion, however, is not borne out by recent experiments at Port Arthur, where large quantities have been fed to sheep without any injury. Time of Flowering : June to autumn; seeds ripe July to frost. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : Frequent in waste places and on cultivated land through- out Canada. Injury : A common impurity in clover seed, also a weed of summer- fallows and grain crops grown on stubble, occasionally so abundant as to crowd out grain. Remedy : The injuries by Wormseed Mustard are mostly by those plants of which the seeds germinate in autumn, and which remain on the land through the winter. The destruction of these, however, is a simple mat- ter by ploughing the land in fall or spring. A disk-harrow may be used with good effect if the work is done early in the spring before too many new roots are made. 19 PLATE 2. HARE'S-EAR MUSTARD, Conringia orientalis (L.) Andrz. Other English names : Eabbit-ear, Hare's-ear Cabbage, Kliukweed. Other Latin names : Erysimum orientale, R. Br. ; Brassica orientalis, L. ; Brassica perfoUata, Lam.; Conringia orientalis, Reich. (Xoxious : Dom., Han., N.W.) Annual and winter annual. Introduced from Europe, probably with flax seed, about 1892, now general throughout Manitoba and the North-west. Stems erect, with a few branches, 1 to 4 feet high. Whole plant perfectly smooth and glaucous (grayish green), with the appearance of a cabbage, when young. Leaves fleshy, entire, near the root obovate, gradually nar- rowed to the base; on the stiif stems, which become very wire-like when ripe, oblong oval, shaped like a hare's or a rabbit's ear, clasping the stem by two rounded auricles. Flowers creamy white, \ inch across. Pods square, 3 to 4 inches long. Seeds [Plate 55, fig. 44 — ^twice nat. size and enlarged 4 times] dark brown, rounded oblong, pointed at the scar end, yV of an inch long, granular-roughened; when soaked in water, covered with a thick pile of short erect white mucilaginous hairs. Time of Floxcering : End of .J tine : seeds ripe August to September. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : In grain fields, on stubble and by roadsides wherever grain is carried. Injurij : This succulent plant absorbs much moisture from the soil, very little grain growing where there is a patch of it. The wiry stems are hard to Viind and an infested crop requires more labour to handle and much more twine to bind it. Remed}/: Pull by hand. If in large quantity, summer fallow. Disk stubbles in fall or early spring to kill plants w])ich germinate after harvest and live over winter. 20 Plate 2 HARE-S-BAR MUSTARD (Connngia onenfalisyz i.Amiiz. Plate 3 GRtEN TANSY MUSTARD (Sisymbrium incisu m , /.v-ff''"' r fi\\pes. nrr v. ^ PLATE 3. GREEN TANSY-MUSTARD, Sisymbrium incisum, Engclm., var. filipei. Gray. Other English uame : Cut-leaved Taiisj--Mustard. Other Latin names: Sophia incisa (Engelm.) Greene. (Noxious: N.W.) Native. Biennial. In the first season a rosette of finely divided leaver lying on the ground. Stems, 3 to 4 feet, erect, widely branching at the top and bearing an enormous number of narrow, smooth, slightly curved pods from J to I inch long on slender spreading pedicels. Whole plant bright green and somewhat glandular. Leaves pinnately divided and the pinnce again once to twice divided into linear-oblong entire or toothed segments. Flowers yellow, one-eighth of an inch across in elongated racemes. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 2 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] very small, ^'- of an inch long, reddish brown, minutely roughened with mucilaginous hairs, shedding out very easily. Time of Flowering : July; seeds ripe August. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : In crops grown on stubble and on imperfectly cultivated summer- fallows . Injury : A coarse unsightly weed and a gross feeder. Remedy : Fall and spring cultivation and hand-pulling. The Gh.4y Tansy-Mustard, Sisymbrium incisum, Engelm., var. Hart- wegianum, Watson, is also a tall coarse biennial plant with much divided foliage like the above, but differs by being covered with short gray pubescence and its more erect habit of growth. It has pods only \ inch long, all crowded close to the slender ascending branches which form a narrow spire. The Gray Tansy-Mustard is the commoner and more widely distributed plant of the two. It flowers and ripens its seed some weeks later. These two coarse biennials grow only from seed, but they throw out long branches from their white tap roots and draw nourishment from a wide area. As they stand up considerably above the crop, they are a conspicuous advertisement of neg- ligent farming. 21 PLATE 4. TUMBLING MUSTARD, Sisymbrium altissimum. L. Other English name : Tall Sisymbrium. Other Latin names: Sisymbrium sinapistrum, Crantz; Sisymbrium pannonicum, Jacq. (Noxious: Dom., Man., N.W.) Annua] and sometimes ■n-inter annual. Introduced into the Prairie Provinces from Central and Southern Europe about 1887. Two to six feet high; stem branching, the lower part and the root leaves downy and glandu- lar, with a musky odour. Upper part of the stem and the much divided leaves smooth. The young plants form a rosette of soft pale green downy leaves, shaped much like those of the Dandelion. On the flowering plants the leaves change very much in shape from the root up, no two being alike. Flowers pale yellow, J inch in diameter, cross-shaped as in all the mem- bers of the Mustard and Cress family. Seed pods 2 to 4 inches long, very slender and produced abundantly along the branches. Each pod contains about 120 seeds, and a single plant has borne one million and a half seeds. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 3 — -natural size and enlarged 8 times] very small ^*5 of an inch, olive-brown or greenish-yellow, minutely roughened with mucilaginous glands, oblong, angular, truncate at the scar end, some- times almost square from compression in the pod, grooves between the edges of the seed leaves and between these latter and the radicle conspicuously darkened. The seed leaves and incumbent radicle plainly visible through the thin skin. When the seeds are ripe the whole head of the plant breaks off and is blown across the prairie, scattering the seeds far and wide. The seeds, as' in many "tumbling weeds," are not very easily shed from the tough pods, consequently a head of this weed may blow about on the prairie for a whole winter, dropping a few seeds at intervals for many miles. Tivie of Flowering : June to July; seed ripe August. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : In grain fields in the West. Occasionally found along rail- ways and in waste places in other parts of Canada, but not as a farm weed. Injury. This is a Mustard with all the bad characteristics of those aggressive enemies of the farmer — enormously prolific, with great powers to spread, owing to its tumbling habit; a coarse, conspicuous plant and a gross feeder. The seed however is so small that with a little care it can be easily cleaned from seed grain. It does not appear to retain its vitality in the soil as long as the seed of some other kinds of Mustard. Bemedy. Hand-pull when there are only a few plants. Pay particular attention to edges of fields and fire-breaks. Cultivate growing crops with weeder or light harrows. 22 Plate 4 TUMBLING MUSTARD (Sisymbrium alt-issim um, /. ) Plate5 -/#i) WILD MUSTARD or CHARLOCK < Brass ica Sinapistrum. av/..v i PLATE 5. WILD MUSTARD, Brauica Sinapislrum, Boisi. Other English names : Charlock, Herrick, Cadluck, Field-Kale, Un- tario Mustard. Other Latin names: Sinapis arvensis, L., et auct. plur. ; Brassica Sinapistrum, Benth. (Noxious: Dom., Man., N.W.) Annual. Introduced from Europe. Now found in all parts of Canada, but most abundant in the Eastern Provinces and Manitoba. The erect branching stems 1 to 3 feet high, rough with stiff, somewhat deflexed, hairs. Lower leaves stalked, usually deeply indented or lobed, with the terminal lobe large. Upper leaves mostly sessile. Flowers bright yellow, fragrant,'! inch broad. Seed pods 1 to 2 inches long, knotty or slightly constricted between the seeds, ribbed and ascending, on short thick pedicles, tipped with a long empty or 1-seeded 2-edged beak, which comes away whole from the ripe pod. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 4^natural size and enlarged 8 times] round, about 15 to 17 in each pod, very dark brown or reddish black and almost smooth, no mucilage. The seeds have great vitality ; an actual proved instance of their having lain in the ground in a salt marsh in Nova Scotia for twenty years is known to me, and another of Wild Mustard appearing abundantly on the ploughing up of a pasture which had been down for twenty-four years. A purple patch at the junction of the branches with the stem is a striking char- acter of this Mustard. Time of Flowering : June to September; seed ripe by August. Propagation : By seeds only. Occurrence : In all farm crops and in waste places. Distributed in crop seeds, by floods and wind, and in manure. Injury : A gross feeder and recognized generally as an indication of neg- ligent farming. Remedy : Hand-pull regularly if only in small numbers. Harrow stub- bles as soon as the crop is harvested to start autumn growth ; cultivate down the first growth or feed off with sheep. Leave late plants, which the frosts of winter will kill before seeds ripen. Spraying young Mustard plants with a 2 per cent, solution of bluestone (sulphate of copper), that is, 2 lbs. of bluestone in every 100 lbs. (10 gallons) of water, has given very satisfactory results. The bluestone solution falling on the leaves and tender stems of the Mustard kills them in a few hours without any injury to the grain or grass crop amongst which they are growing. The work must be done when the Mustard is quite young and succulent, that is, when the first flowers are opening. A barrel, 40 gallons, will almost cover an acre if used with care and put on at the best time, before the plants are too large. The cost is about 80 cents per acre. This method is a practical one in Ontario, where water is plentiful and labour and implements are cheap. In the West this 23 is not always the case, and a far better plan on tie large prairie farms where seeding down with a grain crop is seldom resorted to, is to kill the young plants of Wild Mustard and all other annual weeds, the seeds of which germ- inate near the surface of the soil, by harrowing growing crops with weed- ers or light harrows after the crop is well up and there is no danger of covering the blade too deeply. Some have hesitated to adopt this method, fearing that the grain plants would be dragged out by the harrows. No such fears need be entertained, if the work is done when the land is in the proper condition for harrowing and with light, slope-toothed harrows. It is sug- gested that all who have trouble with annual weeds, such as the various kinds of Mustard, Stinkweed, Ragweed, Lamb's-quarters, Wild Buckwheat, etc., should at any rate try this method on a small part of their crop; one strip up the side of one field will be enough to show the good results to be obtained. In addition to the real Wild Mustard there are two or three other trouble- some species which may be confounded with it, and are all to be regarded in the same light by farmers on account of their aggressiveness. Bird Rape, or German Rape, Brassica campestris, L. (including Brassica Hapa, L., and B. Xapus, L., which cannot be separated by any permanent characters). This resembles the Wild Mustard very closely iu general appear- ance, but has only the root leaves hairy. The stem, upper leaves which clasp the stem by an auricled base, and the long pods on spreading pedicels, are all perfectly smooth and waxy like the leaf of a cabbage. This form is abundant in Manitoba and in some parts of the Provinces of Quebec and Ontario. An important difference between Bird Rape and Wild Mustard is that the former cannot be killed by spraying with the bluestone solution. Indian Mustahd, Brassica juncea, L., which closely resembles Bird Hape, has been detected in a few places in Manitoba and Ontario. It differs chiefly in the stem leaves, which have not clasping bases, in the shape of the pods and in the shorter pedicels, which are less spreading. Black Mustard, Brassica nigra (L.) Koch. Although appearing occasion- ally in all of the Provinces and often mentioned by correspondents, the true Black Mustard does not, as far as I am aware, occur anywhere in Canada as a troublesome weed upon farms. It may be at once known by its long spreading branches covered with short square pods only half an inch long, which are erect and closely appressed to the stem. Wn.D R.\DISH, Raphanvs Raphanistnim, L. Much of the 'Wild Mus- tiird," •Tndluck" or "Kale" of Xova Scotian correspondents is really the V/il(l Radish, which is an annual 1 to 2 feet high with a few long branches starting low down. The root is slender, not swollen as in the Garden Radish. Leaves pale yellowish green, deeply lobed and bearing like the stem a few stiff bristles. The flowers are fewer and larger than in Wild Mustard, notice- ably paler yellow, conspicuously veined. The constricted seed pods give the best characters, and with these no mistake can be made between these two similar plants. ^ In Wild Radish the seed-pods have no valves but are com- posed of two joints, the lower one small, one-tenth of an inch, and seedless, which remains attached to the footstalk; the upper, cylindrical, li inches long, with several one-seeded cells formed by transverse partitions. This seed- bearina: portion separates from the fir.st joint, leavine it attached to the pedicel and in threshing is broken up into single-seeded sections. All (if the .ibove weeds may be treated in the same way, except that the Wild Radish, like the Bird Rape, cannot be destroyed easily by spraying with the bluestone solution. 24 PLATE 7. BALL MUSTARD, Neslia paniculate (L.) Desv. Other English names : Yellow-weed, Neslia. Other Latin name: Myagrum paniculatum, L. (Noxious: Dom., N."W.) Introduced into the West about the same time as Tumbling Mustard, Hare's-ear Mustard and Cow Cockle. A tall slender, annual or winter annual, which has spread through the grain growing districts on the prairies with great rapidity, until it is now found as a bad pest of the grain grower from Manitoba to the Pacific. Stems erect, very slender; strong plants throwing out a few long branches. Whole plant yellowish green and covered with small appressed star-shaped hairs. Lower leaves lance-shaped, narrowed at the base; stem leaves arrow-shaped, clasping the stem at the base, blunt- pointed. Flowers small, J of an inch, orange-yellow; racemes very long, with the small, round, one-seeded, shot-like pods [Plate 55, fig. 46 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] standing oiit from them in all directions ou slender footstalks about half an inch in length. The pods do not open to discharge the seed, but dry up and produce a small, roundish, brown, wrinkled object, like a small piece of dry earth, about jV of an inch across. The contained seed is yellow. Time of Flowering : June to August ; seed ripe July to September. Propagation : By seed only. Occurrence : In grain fields all through the "West. In the East along railways and wherever western grain is carried. Ball Mustard is trouble- some as a weed only in the West. Injury: This weed has spread chiefly from the inconspicuous nature of the seed. It is frequently overlooked in seed grain, owing to the resemblance of the persistent wrinkled pod to a small particle of earth. Remedy : Early summer-fallowing and the disking of stubbles in fall and spring are perhaps the best way to hold it in check. All seed grain should be very carefully cleaned before sowing. In very badly infested fields the stubble should be harrowed as soon as the crop is harvested to start a crop of seedlings, which should be disked down late in aiitumn. The next spring the land may again be cultivated and sown late to early barley, which should be cut on the green side, or oats may be sown for green feed. The edges of fields should be mown before the seeds of the Ball Mustard are ripe, and the hay fed at once or burnt. This and all the mustards make good green feed. ■26 Plate 7 %im^ BALL MUSTARD (Neslia paniculat-a. /./' ) PLATE 13. WHITE COCKLE, Lychnis alba. Mill. Other English names. Evening Lychnis, White Campion. Other Latin names : Lychnis vespertina, Sib. ; L. dioica, L. ; Silene pra- tensis, Gr^dr. and Gren. (Noxious: Dom.) Sparingly introduced in Ontario. Biennial or short-lived perennial. Rootstock thick, sending up a few short barren shoots and long decumbent branching flowering stems 1 to 2| feet high. Whole plant rather viscid hairy, not so much so as in the vSticky Cockle, which plant it resembles somewhat, but is wider branching, has many stems, the leaves are larger and the flowers, which are much more numerous, are pure white, with a more conspicuous crown of short white scales around the centre; the male and female flowers are on separate plants. Styles 5, not 3 as in Sticky Cockle, and the capsule has 10 teeth at the top instead of 6 as in that species. When mature, the calyx containing the capsule is in the White Cockle much larger and more swollen; the seeds [Plate 53, fig. 11 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] are paler gray and rather larger than in Bladder Campion and Sticky Cockle. Time of Flowering : June ; seeds ripe in July. Propagation : By seeds only. Occurrence : Grain crops and meadows. The White Cockle is by no means a common weed in Canada, but has been introduced occasionally with crop seeds imported from Europe. In the vicinity of Guelph, it is abund- ant and troublesome, and it also occurs in a few other places in western Ontario. Injury: Crowding crops; seeds an impurity in grass and clover seeds. This is a very persistent weed. Professor Day, of the Guelph Agricul- tural College, states that the roots are fleshy and hard to kill, unless dragged right up to the surface of the soil. If there is a little earth cover- ing any part of them, they will grow and try to produce seed. When spudded below the surface, they will grow again but do not produce seed that season; persistent spudding is effective. Remedy : A regular short rotation with frequent introduction of hoed crops. In meadows mow often to prevent seed from forming. 35 PLATE 14. PURPLE COCKLE. Lychnis Githago, Lam. Other English name : Com Cockle (used in England, where wheat is generally spoken of as "'corn"^. Other Latin name : Agrostemma Githago, L. (Noxious: Dom., N.W.) Introduced. Annual and winter annual. Erect, 1 to 3 feet high; branches few; whole plant covered with soft silky hairs; not viscid. Leaves long and narrow, pointed, 2 to 5 inches long. Flowers purple, at the tips of the stems and branches, li inches across; the petals notched at the apex, paler toward the center; calyx ovoid, much swollen in fruit, with the ribs very prominent, and the teeth long and conspicuous. Capsule ovoid, with five teeth at apex. Seeds [Plate 55, fig. 49 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] pitchy black, varying from jV to ^ of an inch in diameter, somewhat flattened, rounded triangular; the thin edge notched by the scar of attach- ment. Rough, covered with rows of short teeth. Time of Flowering: July; seed ripe in August. Propagation : By seed. Occurrence : Grain fields. Injury: An impurity in grain. The seed when ground with grain dis- colours the flour and renders it unwholesome, owing to the poisonous prin- ciple sapotoxin, which is found in this plant and some other Cockles. Remedy: Thorough cleaning of seed grain. Hand-p\illing when in small quantity. In districts where fall wheat is sown extensively, spring grains should be substituted for some time. 36 < Plate 14 PURPLE- COCKLE- (Lychnis G ihhago. /«//, ) Plate 15 CHICKWE-&D IShellaria media, v«. v, ) PLATE 15. COMMON CHICKWEED. Slellaria media. Smith. Other English name : Chickweed. Othar Latin names : Alsinc -media, L. ; Stellaria media, "With. Introduced. Annual. Succulent, diffusely branching, decumbent. Roots hair-like and exceedingly tough. Leaves ovate, the lower ones with ciliate-hairy petioles. ' Stems bearing a conspicuous stripe of articulated hairs down one side. Flowers i inch in diameter, atar-shaped, numerous, solitary from the axils of the leaves, in old plants in terminal leafy cymes; petals white, about the length of the thin-margined calyx lobes. Capsules conic-ovoid, spreading or deflexed, longer than the calyx. Seeds [Plate 53. fig. 12 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] small, ^ of an inch in diameter; wedge-kidney-shaped, flattened and coarsely tuberculate, the tubercles ar- ranged in regular curved rows, about 5 on each side and 4 on the edge. Col- our, yellowish brown to dark brown. Time of Flowering : At all times of the year, except during frost ; seed ripening continuously. Propagation. By seed. Occurrence : This well known little weed occurs in all parts of Canada where the soil is moist and rich. Injury : Choking out smaller and weaker plants, including seedlings of all crops. A persistent grower requiring constant hoeing to keep it down. Seeds often found in grass and clover seeds. Remedy : Constant hoeing. An occasional weed in the Maritime Provinces is the Grass-leaved or Lessee Stitchwoet, Stellaria graminea, L., a wide branching plant 1 ^o 2 feet high, with many grassy leaves in pairs along the slender stems and bearing many starry white flowers nearly ^ inch across. The seeds [Plate 53, fig. 13 — twice nat. size and enlarged 8 times] are often found in clover and grass seeds; they are of the same size but more nearly circular in outline and rounder in contour than those of the Common Chickweed; the surface markings are quite different; instead of tubercles, the surface is thickly covered with short curved ridges in more or less regular rows. Somewhat similar to the Common Chickweed but easily distinguished from it, are the Mouse-ear Chickweeds, two or three of which occur in Can- ada as agricultural weeds. These are plants of much the same liabit as the above, but covered all over with downy hairs, which in some species are glandular, giving a dirty appearance to the plants by reason of the dust which adheres to them. The CoMMOX MorsE-E-4E Chickweed, Cerastixim vulgatum,'!,., is a perennial plant which occurs in cultivated land, pastures and lawns through- out Canada. The pods are much elongated and curved upwards. The seeds [Plate 53, fig. 14— natural size and enlarged 8 times] resemble those of the Common Chickweed but have the tubercles fewer, less regularlj- ar- 37 ranged and more of the nature of short ridges than of low raised promin- ences as in the former species. The shape too is rather more angular, and they are not much more than half the size. The Field Chickweed, Cerastium arvense, L., is in some places a trouble- some and persistent weed. A native form occurs abundantly throughout the western prairies, but gives little trouble. In some parts of Ontario, Quebec and the Maritime Provinces there is a form with smoother leaves, which produces a copious system of underground rootstocks, which enables this plant to become a persistent enemy. Pastures or meadows invaded by it must be broken up and cleaned by a short rotation. The flowers of the Field Chickweed are large and conspicuous, more than J inch across, and borne on erect flowering stems 3 to 6 inches high. In the West the plant is sometimes grown as a garden flower for its beauty. The seed is larger than those of the preceding Chickweeds, almost round and coarsely tuber- culate, with rounded prominences. 33 Plate 16 BLADDE-R CAMPION iSilene i nf I al-a . sw/i ) I PLATE 16. BLADDER CAMPION, 5(7ene inflate. Smith. Other English names : Cow-bell, White Bottle. Other Latin names: Cucubalus Behen, L. ; Silene Cucubalus, Wibel.; Silene vulgaris (Moench) Garcke; Behen vulgaris, Moench. Introduced. Perennial, with deep running rootstocks, which send up many barren shoots, and decumbent branched flowering stems. Whole plant pale green and in the common form perfectly smooth. Stems 1 foot to 18 inches high, foi-ming large tufts. Leiaves ovate-lanceolate, in pairs, meeting round the stems. Flowers white, nearly an inch across, drooping, the petals deeply divided. Calyx much inflated, pale green, veined with light purple, 5-toothed at the contracted apex. Capsule globular-ovoid, included in the calyx, opening by 5 short recurved teeth. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 9 — twice natu- ral size and enlarged 8 times] round-kidney-shaped, about -^V of an inch across, covered with concentric rows of small conical tubercles. The seeds of this species and of Silene noctiflora and Lychnis alba are so similar that they can be separated only by an expert. In many instances some seeds of one species resemble those of one of the other two so much that they are indistinguishable. In Plate 53, seeds of the three species have been represented which seemed best to show the average characters of each. Time of Flowering : May to July ; seeds ripe in July. Propagation : By seeds and running rootstocks. Occurrence ; By roadsides, on railway banks and in hay fields, all through the Eastern Provinces. Injury : The seeds are often found in clover and timothy seed. Remedy: This deep-rooted perennial is difficult to eradicate. Deep ploughing and a short rotation of crops are necessary. Frequent cultiva- tion with a broad-shared cultivator will be found very useful in holding this pernicious weed in check. The young shoots of this plant have been used as a pot-herb, and are said to be excellent, having the flavour of both asparagus and green peas. 39 PLATE 17. SPURREY, Spergula awcnsis, L. Other English names : Corn Spurrey, Sandweed, Pickpurse. Introduced. Annual. Stems ascending.branching from the base, 6 to 18 inches high, almost smooth, sparingly glandular hairy above. Leaves nar- rowly linear 1 to 2 inches long, apparently whorled at the joints of the stem, but really clustered at the joints in two opposite sets of 6 to 8 together, with scale-like stipules between them. Flowers white, opening in sunshine, i inch across, in terminal forked cymes; peduncles deflexed in fruit. Seeds lens-shaped or round and compressed, with the margins extended into a narrow wing, dull black, the marginal wing pale. The surface of the seed is more or less covered with small pale-coloured elongated protulx^rances, like gland-tipped hairs. These are sometimes entirely wanting, when the plant is called variety sativa. Both the small protuberances and the wing are sometimes lost by friction when the seeds occur among other see is. Tiie seeds [Plate 53, fig. 8 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] vary much in size, but average about yV of an inch in diameter. The embryo is cylindrical and spirally coiled within the seed. Time of Flowering : July; seed ripe July-August. Propagation : By seed. Occurrence : Occasional in fields and waste places throughout Canada, but frequent in grain fields in the Eastern Provinces, and in parts of Lntish Columbia. Sometimes sown as feed for sheep or as a binder of soil on sandy land. Tvjtiry: Troublesome on sandy land in the Maritime Provinces and in British Columbia. The seeds are frequently found in grass and clover seeds. Eemedy : Short rotation of crops. Frequent hoeing early in the season. 40 Plate 17 S P U R R tY • Spergula arvensis. /,.) Plate 18 PURSLANt OR PUSLEY I Porrulaca oleracea. /..' PLATE 18. PURSLANE. Portulaca oleracea. L. Other Englisli names : Puslev, Wild Portulaca. Introduced. Annual, of tropical origin, now found in gardens in most parts of Canada. Seeds germinating rather late. A fleshj- prostrate per- fectly smooth plant, freely branching from a single central root, with red- dish stems and dark green alternate, wedge-shaped leaves mainly clustered at the ends of the branches. Flowers sessile, solitary, about ^ inch across, with a two-cleft calyx and 5 small yellow petals ; stamens 7 to 12, style 4 to 6-cleft. Capsule membranous, many-seeded, the top coming off as the lid of a box. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 15 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] black, roughened but shining, about jV of an inch in diameter, narrowly kidney-shaped, much as in the Pink family and, like the seeds of most of the members of that family, having the embryo curved and running around the outside of the seed. Time of Floxcering : July till frost, and seeds ripening for the greater part of that time. Propagation : By seeds. The fleshy leaves and stems give it such vital- ity that flowering plants hoed out and left on the ground will continue ripen- ing seeds for weeks. Occurrence : In rich land and particularly in gardens. Most abundant in the Eastern Provinces; but being constantly introduced into new localities with seeds. Injury : Although Purslane is an annual without any running root, and does not appear until late in the season, it is perhaps more difficult to extir- pate than almost any other weed found on rich soil. Bemedy : Constant shallow hoeing, particularly when the young plants first appear, is the only way to control this weed. If left until the plants have attained a large size and the flowers have formed, they must be raked up after hoeing and removed from the land. THE PEA FAMILY, LEGUMINOS.£. This large and important family of plants is well represented in Can- ada and contains many useful food plants, such as peas and beans and the clovers, but also some very poisonous species, as the Loco Weeds, Oxytropis, and the Golden Bean, Thcrmop.'Of, of the western plains, as well as a small number of farm weeds of secondary importance. All plants of the Pea fam- ily serve a useful purpose as collectors of nitrogen from the air, which they render available for plant food. Every species can be recognized as belonging to this family by one or other of two characters, both of which are peculiar to it, namely, a butterfly- shaped corolla, such as we find on a large scale in the Sweet Pea of our gar- dens, and, for a fruit, a pod like that of the same plant or of the garden pea, technically termed a legume. By far the larger number of the plants have both characters combined. Mention may be made of the following, which are sometimes detrimental in farm lands. The Wild Tare, Vicia angustifolia. Roth, is an introduced annual in the Eastern Provinces, which, on account of its early ripening, is 41 difficult to get rid of; the leaves are compoxmd, of 8 to 16 linear or lanceolate leaflets ; tlie flowers purple, 1 or 2 in the upper axils of the leaves ; the pods are black and linear, with the tip sharp and turned up, 2 inches long, 4 to l2-8eeded, the seeds [Plate 55, fig. 50— natural size and enlarged 4 times] globose, ranging from ^ to yV of an inch in diameter, velvety black or olive brown mottled with white and dotted with fine black points. The Wild Tare is somewhat like the cultivated Tare, Vicia sativa, L., so val- uable for fodder and known to some farmers as Vetches or Fitches. This lat- ter has much larger leaves and seeds, wiih brown pods, and, what is of areat importance when sown, does not persist in the land. To eradicate this pest a short rotation in which clover is included will be found most useful. After harvest, cultivation will help by causing many seeds to germinate which will be killed by the winter. The PiTEPLE Tutted Vetch, Vicia Cracca, L., a persistent perennial, is rather difficult to get out of old meadows but produces a large crop of rich fodder, which is rather beneficial than otherwise in hay. The seed-pods of a few members of the Pea family become burs in wool, as for instance the Spotted and Toothed Medicks, Medicago maculata, Willd., and 3/. denticulata, Willd., neither of which, however, has established itself firmly in Canada. The only plant of this family, giving trouble in this way, is the Wild Liquorice, Glycyrrhiza lepidota, Pursh, which occurs nn the prairies. The Sweet Clovers, Melilotus aJba. Lam., and M. officinalis, Willd., often complained of by farmers, are biennial wayside weeds, which, as each plant lives for 2 years only, are easily subdued by preventing them from seeding. The Eabbit's-foot Clover, TrifnJium arvense. L., is a useless member of the family which is not common in Canada and is of little im- portance. THE ROSE FAMILY, ROSACEA. The TJose family is more remarkable for ornamental plants than for those which may be considered agricultural pests. The family is extensive, and there are gathered together within its limits plants with regular flowers, by which their relationship can at once be seen but which present the ereat- est diversity of characters in the fruit. In the Spiraeas or Meadowsweets we find the seeds in small, many-seeded, papery pockets called follicles. In the true roses the lower part of the calyx is fleshy and urn-like, holding many hairy achenes. In the raspberry the fruit is composed of many fleshy ber- ries surrounding a dome-like receptacle. In the strawberry it is the recep- tacle which becomes fleshy and bears the seeds (achenes) sunk in little pits on it.^ surface. In the Cinquefoils both the receptacle and the seeds are dry, and the markings on the hard shell of the latter are of great service in sep- arating some of the closely allied species. In the species of Avens (Geum) and Dryas the achenes are prolonged into the persistent styles, which are jointed or hooked above or are feathery. Of the small number of weeds belonging to the Rose family, it is sad to relate thiit one of the most troublesome is the beautiful Prairie Rose, Rosa pratincola, Greene, (which includes also Rosa acicularis, var. Bourgeaui- ana, and Rosa arhansana of Canadian writers). In Southern Manitoba this dwarf, large-flowered rose is found very persistent in grain fields by reason of its deep-rooted perennial underground stems, which send up many flower- ing shoots from the axils of scales on the rootstocks. To destroy Eoses, the land should be ploughed with a sharp plough in hot weather and then disked twice afterwards at intervals of a week or ten days. Mr. T. N. Willing re- commends spring ploughing rather than stubble cropping for land which is infested with Wild Roses and similar shrubs. The irregular, angular seeds, with hard, whitish shells [Plate 5o, ficr. .',!_ natural size and enlarged 4 times] are often found in the screenings of western grain. 42 The Haedhack, Spircea tomentosa, L., is a pretty dwarf shrub, 2 to 3 feet, with short petioled, ovate, thick, toothed leaves, which are smooth above but downy beneath. The pink flowers are in dense steeple-like panicles at the tips of the erect branches. This shrub invades mountain pastures in the Province of Quebec and is very hard to keep down. Where pastures cannot be ploughed, the tufts must be pulled out by the roots and the spots sown with a quick-growing grass such as Orchard Grass, or the patches may be mowed down with a heavy, sharp scythe and grass sown. If there are enough sheep in the pasture, they will keep down the new shoots. SiLVEEWEED, PotentUla Anserina, L., is sometimes found in damp land. It is a perennial with slender jointed runners, which root and form new plants at each joint. The leaves, silvery hairy beneath, are pinnate, with from 3 to 10 large ovate, sharply-toothed leaflets on each side, with very small ones between them. The long-stalked golden yellow flowers, nearly an inch across, are followed by a cluster of dry, smooth achenes. Silverweed roots on the surface of the land like a strawberry and is best controlled by drain- ing the land and ploughing down the plants. The Upeight Cinquefoil, PotentUla norvegica, L., is an erect, branch- ing, hairy annual with small yellow flowers and small kidney-shaped achenes with curved branching grooves on the surface. It grows commonly in mea- dows, and the seeds are frequent among grass and clover seeds. This is the PotentUla monspeliensis , L., of late floras. THE EVENING-PRIMROSE FAMILY, ONAGRACEM. There are a few weeds belonging to this family and many showy flower- ing plants, as the beautiful Fuchsias, Clarkias and Evening-primroses. The structure of the flowers is botanically of much interest; but, as the plants of this order which are troublesome as weeds are easily recognized, there is no need to speak of them here. The more noticeable of the weedy plants are, a few kinds of Willowherbs (EpUobium) which are also known as "fire- weeds." The commonest kinds occurring on cultivated land are the Great Willowherb or Fireweed, EpUohium angustifoliitm, L., and the Sticky Fire- weed, EpUobium adenocaulon, Haussk. These are rather persistent on wet land, the former from its running perennial rootstocks and the latter chiefly from the great number of downy seeds it produces. Of the Evening-prim- roses, two species require mention, the White-stemmed Evening-primrose, and the Common Evening-peimbose, (Enothera bienrns. L.. with large yel- low flowers. This tall, coarse biennial occurs throughout the country and is easily recognized by its tall branching habit (4 ft. by 3 ft.), its soft, downy lanceolate leaves and its large, showy yellow flowers, which open in the evening. This weed makes only a rosette of leaves the first year. For this reason it is a weed only in crops sown in autumn or on stubble. In thin clover fields it sometimes occurs conspicuously and should be either spudded out or cut off below the crown in the first season, or the tall flower- ing plants should be cut off below the surface of the soil and pulled out be- fore the seeds ripen. This will disturb the soil much less than if the large, wide, spreading roots are pulled out. On stubble land to be sown to grain, the rosette-like plants should be destroyed by fall or spring cultivation. The seeds [Plate 53, fig. 17, natural size and enlarged 8 times] area frequent impurity in clover seed. They are produced in large numbers in long tapering 4-celled capsules which are clustered all along the stems. The dark reddish brown seeds are about yV of an inch in length, much angled by compression in the seed pods and with a roughened surface. ^As the pods do not easily shed their seeds and the plants are at all times con- spicuous, much contamination of clover seed may be prevented with a little caro ftt harvest time. 4.3 PLATE 19. WHITE EVENING-PRIMROSE, Anogra pallida (Lindley) Britton, var. leplophylla, Nutt. Other English name : White-stemmed Evening-primrose. Other Latin name : (Enothera alhicaulis, Nutt. and Canadian authors. Native. Perennial. Stems mostly simple, shining white, sparsely pubescent above, somewhat decumbent, about 3 feet high; the leaves from 1 to 4 inches long, narrow and waved, but usually entire in our north-west- ern plant. Eoots white and fleshy, wide-spreading and throwing up flower- ing stems at intervals, thus forming large patches. Flowers axillary, large and handsome, 1^ inches across, waxy-white turning pinkish as they fade, open in day time, odour unpleasant. Tips of the calyx-segments at the end of the buds free as 4 little points. Capsules narrow and curved, four- angled, about one inch long with the seeds in single rows in the 4 cells. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 16 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] about -^ of an inch long, normally spindle-shaped but angular and somewhat twisted by compression in the pod, smooth and mucilaginous when soaked, yellowish brown (under the microscope, minutely dotted with black and faintly striate lengthwise). This plant has usually been referred to in Canadian works as (Enothera alhicaulis, but all the plants I have been able to examine are either the above named variety, or possibly QC. NuttaUii (Spach) Jlydb. True (Enothera (Anogra) alhicaulis has the calyx segments closely joined together at the tips of the buds and the seeds are quite different, being bright yellow, lemon- shaped and pitted all over the surface. Time of Flowering : July-August ; seeds ripe September. Propagation : By seeds and extensive deep-running fleshy rootstocks, every part of which when broken will throw out shoots and form new plants. Occurrence : Sandy land ; Manitoba and westward to British Columbia. Injury: This deep-rooted perennial is very persistent in sandy land. Remedy : Summer-fallow with deep or shallow ploughing, according to the nature of the soil, after the growth has been made in summer. Culti- vate in fall or in spring before seeding to a crop. 44 Plate 19 WHITE EVENING-PRIMROSE THE PARSLEY FAMILY, UMBELLIFERM. This large family contains many herbaceous plants of weedy appear- ance, seldom of much floral beauty, but important as food plants, boili for their large succulent roots, as in the Carrot and Parsnip, or for their fleshy leaf stalks, as Celery. The seeds of many are aromatic and wholesome, as Caraway and .Coriander. There are also many plants like the Cowbane and Hemlock, which contain virulent poisons. The leaves are mostly pinnatifid, repeatedly sub-divided, and the flowers are borne in compound umbels, a form of inflorescence in which all the secondary foot-stalks of the flowers start from the top of the peduncle or general foot-stalk, like the supports of the ribs of an umbrella. The ovary is 2-celled and the tube of the 5-lobed calyx covers it and is completely adherent to it. The corolla has 5 petals, often unequal in size. When ripe, the 2 cells of the fruit separate into 2 seed-like halves, having 5 main ribs running lengthwise, which in the differ- ent plants are modified into wings or into rows of bristles or prickles of great value in separating the species. Inside the corky coat of the seeds are several longitudinal cavities filled with resinous or oily matters, which give the characteristic odours or flavours to the fruit. The true seed is inside the fruit and is tasteless. There are very few Canadian farm weeds be- longing to the Parsley family ; undoubtedly the most important members are the poisonous Cowbanes. The Caraway, Carum Carui, L., has run wild in some parts of Eastern Canada and is often complained of; but it is a biennial, and, if the plants are mowed' closely or fed oS for two years, it disappears. The Carrot and the Parsnip in the same way have escaped from cultivation in some places, but are easily disposed of in land that can be ploughed. Meadow land infested with Wild Carrot should be broken up and re-seeded. 45 PLATE 20. SPOTTED CCN^BANE. Cicuta maculala, L. Other English names : Cowbane, Water Parsnip, Water Hemlock, Poi- son Parsnip, Musquash Eoot, Beaver Poison. Other Latin name: Cicuta virosa, L., var. maculata, Coult & Rpse. Native. Perennial. Stems stout, erect, hollow and jointed, widely branching, three to six feet high, quite smooth, pale green, dotted and streaked with purple. Leaves compound, twice or three times divided, clasp- ing by an expanded base, the lower on long petioles, the upper sessile. The leaflets lanceolate, deeply toothed. Flowers small, white, in compound um- bels, one to four inches across; the rays of the many-flowered umbellets un- equal, from one to two inches long. Fruit [Plate 55, fig. 52 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] smooth, ovate, compressed laterally, ^ of an inch long, separating into two boat-shaped ribbed seeds. When cut across, these seeds show four oil tubes between the ribs and two on the flat side. Root, a bundle of a few fleshy spindle-shaped tubers, like small parsnips, at the base of the stem. Time of Flowering -. July to August; seeds ripe August to September. Propagation : Copiously by seeds and by offsets from the crown of the root at the base of the old stem. Occurrence : In low land along waterways, probably right across the Dominion. Injury : Roots intensely poisonous to stock, particularly cattle, which pull them out when grazing in spring and eat them freely. When first turned out, the animals find few green plants to eat, and in browsing over the wet lands where these Water Parsnips grow they find the new green shoots, and when eating these pull out the roots. This is easily done owing to there being few root fibres. The roots not only look like small parsnip roots, but like them have a strong aromatic odour, which seems to make them very attractive to stock. It is claimed that the flowering plants when cut in hay may be eaten by animals without any ill effects, but that the ripe plants bear- ing seeds are dangerous. The whole plant, however, contains some of the poisonous principle, although it is true that this is most abundant in the roots and the seeds. Consequently no hay containing the Spotted Cowbane, or other Water Parsnips (also called Water Hemlocks), should be fed. This plant, and in the West probably two or three other allied species closely resembling it (the Oregon Water Hemlock, Cicuta vagans, Greene, the Purple-Stemmed Water Hemlock, Cicuta DougJasii, C. & R., and the Wyoming Water Hemlock, Cicuta occidentalis. Greene), are the cause of nearly all the deaths of cattle reported in spring; aiid, unfortunately, in cases where much of the plant has been eaten no remedies can be applied. The means generally adopted on the plains in mild cases, when these are discovered in time, is to administer two or three daily doses of lard or bacon grease; but it is seldom that anything can be done on account of the intense virul- ence and quick action of the poison. A piece of root of the Oregon Water Hemlock, about the size of a walnut, is stated by Prof. HedricK to be enough to kill a cow in about fifteen minutes. Remedy : From the nature of the localities where Water Parsnips grow, hand-pulling is the best treatment for this dangerous weed. This is easily 46 Plate 20 -■^-^.^^'^^ii; SPOTTED COWBANE- OR WATER PARSNIP HCicut-a maculat-a./. ' done, particularly if the roots are first loosened with a spud or some other implement. The plants should be carefully piled up to dry and then burnt or otherwise destroyed. The poisonous principle called cicutoxin is of a resinous or oily nature and will contaminate water, if, as is sometimes done, the pulled up plants are thrown into sloughs where they may be trampled upon by stock. It is most advisable that stockmen should know the appear- ance of these plants so as to destroy them whenever seen or, at any rate, so as to keep their animals away from localities where they grow too abundantly to be pulled out by hand. THE SUNFLOWER FAMILY, COMPOSITE. This, the largest family of flowering plants, includes many thousands of species and is represented in all parts of the world. The characters of the family are well marked. The flowers of all are composite, that is composed of many florets or small flowers standing together on an expanded enlarge- ment at the ends of the stalks and known as the receptacle. Individually, these flower-heads or collections of many florets have the appearance of simple flowers and are popularly so spoken of, as for instance, the flower of the Sun- flower, a Daisy, or a Dandelion, while in realitj^ each one is a large number of flowers joined together at the end of a common footstalk, and what appears to be a calyx is a cluster of bracts or small leaves. A striking character of this family is that the anthers are united at their edges into a vertical tube with the style inside it. The calyx of the florets, when present, is united with the one-celled ovary, and in fruit is modified into a ring of silky bristles, awns, teeth or scales, which is called the pappus. The true seed is enclosed in a hard dry shell, like a small nut, botanically called an achene. The flor- ets of composite flowers are of two kinds, both of which may sometimes be seen in the same flower-head, as in the Common Sunflower. The marginal or ray-flowers are strap-shaped and the smaller disk-flowers are tubular. When the flower-head has ray-flowers, either throughout or round the edge, it is termed radiate; when there are no ray-flowers it is said to be discoid. Our Canadian members of this large family are divided by Dr. Asa Gray in his Manual, which is still used as the text book in most of our schools, into two series according to the nature of the corolla. In the first series, the Tube-flowered Composites, the corolla is tubular in all the per- fect flowers, and regularly 5-lobed, strap-shaped only in the marginal or ray-flowers which, when present (as is not always the case), have either only pistils or have neither pistils nor stamens. In the second series or Strap- flowered Composites, the corollas on all the florets of the head are strap- shaped and perfect, that is, contain both pistils and stamens. To this series, known as the Chicory family (Cichoriacect), the Chicory belongs and many other plants with similar flowers, including many well known weeds, such as the Dandelions, Hawkweeds, Sowthistles and Lettuces. By far the larger number of our weeds belong to the first series, the Tube-flowered Composites ; and in such large numbers of plants as are grouped under that one series, it becomes necessary to subdivide them into tribes. In the AsTEE tribe there are a few weeds of the Gumweeds and Flea- banes which are worthy of mention ; but it is seldom that any of our Cana- dian species of the true Asters become aggressive weeds. The Gtjmweed Grindelia squarrosa, Dunal, is a bright golden-yellow flowered plant of the western plains. This seldom becomes troublesome in crops, although the seeds [Plate 55, fig. 53 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] have been found among wheat screenings and have occasionally been sent in under the im- pression that they were the seeds of Canada TKstle. They are, however, larger, and are much flattened and more angular, grooved lengthwise, and duller in colour. The Gumweed is accredited with causing hay-fever in the West. The flower buds just before opening have a large drop of liquid resiu on them, and, as the plants frequently grow along trails, they are trouble- some from soiling ladies' dresses. Of the Fleabanes, the Horseweed, Erigeron canadensis, L., is the most abundant and widespread, its tall spire-like stems being seen on stubble left for summer fallowing, on neglected land and in waste places in all parts of the Dominion. The Daisy Fleabane, Erigeron annuus, Pers., with coarsely- toothed leaves and the Rough Daisy Fleabane, Erigeron strigosiis, Muhl., which has entire leaves, are common clover-field weeds in all parts of Eastern Canada. The small seeds are carried in grass seeds. Among the Eveelasting Flowees some species of Antennaria and Gna- phalium injure pastures by crowding out the grasses. By breaking up the sod these can be destroyed. A small natural group consisting in Canada of the Ragweeds, Marsh- elders and Cockleburs, has been separated recently from the Aster family and called the Ragweed f.4.mily {Amhrosiacece); but in this publication it is thought better to keep it in its old place near the Sunflowers. Some kinds of Wild S^nfloavees are noticeable weeds in the Prairie Provinces. In Manitoba the Many-flowered Prairie Sunflower, Helianthus Maximiiiani, Schrader, and the Black-headed Sunflower, H. rigidus, Desf., are the most abundant; but the Wild Artichoke, Helianthus doronicoides. Lam., is the most diflicult to eradicate. For all of these, early summer fal- lowing is the best method. The seeds are often found among western grain. In the Many-flowered Prairie Sunflower, they are [Plate 55, fig. 60 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] about \ of an inch long, variable in shape, but mostly narrowly oblong egg-shaped in outline, flattened and rather an- gular, grooved lengthwise, brown, cross-mottled with irregular zigzag white lines; the apical and. basal scars are both conspicuous, the latter rather oblique and indented in the middle. On the western plains are many species of Wormwood, Artemisia, which are spoken of collectively as Sage brushes. Two of these, the Pasture Sage, Artemisia Ludoviciana, Nutt., and the so called Sweet Sage or Lesser Pasture Sage, Artemisia frigida, Willd., are sometimes troublesome by infesting home pastures, where the grass has been eaten close, necessitating the breaking up of the sod. The best known of the Wormwoods is the False-tanst, Artemisia biennis, Willd., a biennial which occurs in all parts of Canada and although very easily eradicated is a very unsightly weed when growing, as is often the case, among grain crops on stubble. The remarkably small seeds, ts of an inch, are dark brown, egg-shaped, wrinkled lengthwise and with a conspicuous pale-coloured ring-like basal scar. [Plate 53, fig. 18 — twice natural size and enlarged 8 times.] Closely allied with the Thistles is a weed which is rather abundant in meadows in the Maritime Provinces. This is the Knapweed, Centavrea nigra, L., a rather coarse perennial with thistle-like flowers, over one inch across and H inches high. The involucre or calyx-like whorl of bracts sur- rounding the flower-heads is spherical and composed of black-fringed scales. The seeds are about J of an inch long by about half as wide, taper- ing to the base, cut off squarely above. On one side of the base, but above the end, is the large conspicuous basal scar; ihe lar^c apical scar covers the whole of the top of the seed, and is surrounded by the pappus of two or three rows of short, flat bristles. The seeds (achenes) [Plate r)(i. ficr. 6-3 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] are slightly angular, somewhat flattened and striped lengthwise on their shining gray surface with pale ridges ; the whole seed is sparsely hairy. The Knapweed is palatable to all stock and in no way injurious, but is unsightly and takes the place of ihe more valu- able true grasses. 48 Plate 21 NARROW-LEAVED GOLDENROD (Solidago lanceola^a./. ) PLATE 21. NARROW-LEAVED GOLDENROD, Solidago lanceolala. L. Other English names : Bushy or Fragrant Goldenrod, Yellow-weed. Other Latin names: Euthamia graminifolia (L.) Xutt.; Chrysocoma grainini folia, L. Native. Perennial. Stems erect, cymosely branched above, 2 to 3 feet high, almost smooth. Leaves numerous, linear-lanceolate, 1 to 5 inches long, the edges rough-pubescent. Separate heads of flowers about one-quarter of an inch across, bright golden yellow in dense, flat-topped clusters. Seeds (achenes) ovate-oblong, small, -^ of an inch, downy. Pappus white. Time of Flowering : July to September ; seeds ripe in September. Propagation: By seeds blown by the wind, and by long running root- stocks forming new plants at the tips, and, if left undisturbed, soon forming large patches. Occurrence : In low land, throughout the Dominion. Injury: Much complained of as a weed in damp hay meadows in the Eastern Provinces. The seeds, which are produced in large numbers, bear a silky pappus, by means of which they are blown long distances by the wind. Remedy : This and all the other Goldenrods root near the surface of the ground and are easily destroyed by ordinary cultivation or shallow ploughing. Several different Goldenrods are mentioned from time to time by farmers as rather troublesome, free-growing perennial weeds. The species most com- plained of is the Narrow-leaved Goldenrod ; but frequent mention is also made of the Canada Goldenrod, Solidago canadensis, L., of which there are several varieties — the Smooth Goldenrod, Solidago serotina. Ait., and the Tall Hairy Goldenrod, Solidago rugosa, Nutt. These gay, showj- autumn-flowering plants are all easily controlled by ordinary methods of good farming, and are more wayside and fence-corner weedy plants than agricultural pests of well worked land. (4) 49 PLATE 22. POVERTY WEED. loa axillarh, Pursh. Other English name : Small-flowered Marsh-elder. Native. Perennial. Stems herbaceous, branching, ascending, from tough, woody extensive underground stems or rootstocks, 6 to 12 inches high, very leafy. Whole plant with a rank odour. Leaves thick, obovate to linear- oblong, entire, rough-hairy. The lower ones opposite, the upper alternate. Flower-heads drooping, solitary, on very short pedicels, from the axils of the upper leaves, ^ of an inch across, inconspicuous. Seeds (achenes) pear- shaped, slightly flattened, sometimes keeled on the side and a little curved towards the base; colour variable, olive green, yellowish-brown to almost black ; surface mealy and dull, J of an inch long. Achenes [Plate 55, fig. 54 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] very few, seldom more than one or two in each flower head, and very many heads have none. Time of Flowering : June to August ; seeds ripe July to September. Proi agation : Mainly by the extensive system of underground stems, which sead up a great many flowering, leafy shoots. Occurrence : In grain fields and pastures from Manitoba to the interior of British Columbia, thriving in all soils, but occurring generally on land where there is some alkali. Injury: A most persistent perennial, forming large patches. Very ex- haustive of moisture, thus starving crops and rendering the land hard to work. Remedy : This has proved a most difficult enemy to dislodge when well established on the rich farms of the West. It requires, as Mr. T. N. Willing says in his Bulletin, '"Hints to Grain Growers," Eegina, 1905, well directed, persistent eSort with sharp implements. The ploughing for summer fallow should be clean and deep, followed by frequent cultivation afterwards with a broad-shared cultivator. The seed of the low growing Poverty Weed sel- dom occurs in grain or grass seeds in our country, although Prof. Hillman found it in 11 per cent, of samples of alfalfa seed in Nevada. The False Eagweed, Iva xanthiifolia, Nutt., a coarse annual with a remarkable superficial resemblance before flowering to the Great Eagweed, is a very common plant by roadsides, along railways and in corrals in Manitoba, where it grows to a height of 6 to 8 feet and produces an enormous quantity of seeds; these seeds [Plate 55, fig. 55 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] are occasionally found among those of grain, grass and alfalfa from the West. They are of the same general shape as those of Poverty Weed, but are only yV of an inch long, more tapering and less robust, somewhat darker in colour, the surface finely striated lengthwise ; when fresh, with a gray mealy covering which partially rubs off and gives them a mottled appearance. The young plant has the same habit of growth and leaf outline as the Great Eagweed, but can be recognized at once by taking hold of the stem, which in False Eagweed is perfectly smooth, while in the true Eagweed it and the leaves are noticeably rough; when full grown, the resemblance between the two plants disappears. The False Eagweed bears at the top of the stem a large, loose panicle of dark-coloured flowers, while the Great Eagweed has many of the leaves distinctly three-lobed and the tip of each branch ends with a long rat tail-like spike of male flowers. 50 Plate 22 POVERTY W&ED (Iva axillaris, i-ur.-m ) Plate 23 I GREAT RAGWE-ED I Ambrosia hnfida./. > PLATE 23. GREAT RAGWEED. Ambrosia Irifida. L. Other Jlinglisii names : Tall Kagweed, Crownweed, Kingweed, Bitter- weed. (Noxious: Dom., Ont., Man., X.W.). Native. Annual. A tall, coarse branching plant, 4 to 8 feet high, with very rough stems and leaves; pale green and bearing the sterile and fertile flowers in different heads on the same plant, the sterile in long, slender spikes at the ends of the branches, and the fertile two or three together, sessile in the axils of the leaves at the base of the spikes. Sterile flowers cup-shaped, nodding, \ inch across; anthers yellow and conspicuous; fertile flowers in- conspicuous; pistils slender and purplish. Leaves opposite on long margined petioles, very variable in shape, on young plants deeply indented but scarcely lobed; as the stems grow, 3 or even 5-lobed leaves are produced, and on many plants may be found leaves without lobes. Seeds fachenes) [Plate -55. fig. 57 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] brown, um-shaped, about \ inch long, tipped with a tapering beak and bearing around the base of this about one- third from the top, like the points of a crown, 6 or 8 blunt spines which are the ends of more or less distinct ribs ; this crown-like appearance of the top of the seed has suggested the names Kingweed and Crownweed, sometimes used by millers. Time of Flowering : July ; seed ripe August. Propagation : By seed, in grain and carried by water. Occurrence : Ontario and occasional in other eastern provinces. Abun- dant in the rich Red River valley lands in Manitoba. Not extending west as a weed, but sometimes seen along the railways. Injury : This coarse annual, when in crops, crowds and starves grain growing near it, but the chief loss to farmers is due to the difficulty experi- enced by millers in separating the seeds from grain, owing to its similarity in size and weight to wheat ; the spines also are said to catch in the meshes of the screens and to give much trouble in the cleaning process. Remedy : This is one of the few weeds in Manitoba for which hand pull- ing is a practical remedy. As a rule, the plants are conspicuous and grow near the edges of fields. A little labour in pulling before the seeds are ripe, being well repaid by the clean crop reaped, special attention should be given to fields liable to be flooded. Good work may frequently be done for this as for several other weeds by running a mowing machine around the edges of fields before the seeds are ripe. 51 PLATE 24. COMMON RAGWEED, Ambrosia ademisiafolia, L. Other English names : Eonian Wormwood, Smaller Ragweed, Hogweed. (Noxious : Dom.). Native. Annual. A coarse weedy branching plant, with hairy stems, 2 to 4 feet high. Leaves thin and much cut up, twice divided. Flowers and fruit [Plate 55, fig. 58 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] much resembling those of the Great Eagweed but smaller. Occasionally plants may be found which bear only fertile flowers. Time of Flowering : July ; seed ripe August. Propagation : By seeds, carried in the seeds of grain, clover and grasses. Occurrence : In rich land and waste places throughout Eastern Canada and gradually extending into the Prairie Provinces. Injury : The seeds are an impurity in clover, small grains and grass seed. The large spreading roots rob crops of moisture and plant food, and the free branching growth chokes out weaker plants. Remedy : As the Eagweeds develop late in the season, roots and other crops should be hand-hoed after the usual horse cultivation. Land badly in- fested can be cleaned by a regular sj-stem of short rotations, care being taken to cultivate immediately after harvest, and to mow down the fall growth on new meadows. The Perennial Eagweed. Ambrosia psilostachya, DC, is a western plant found on the prairies, resembling the Common Eagweed in the shape of the leaves and flowers, but with running perennial rootstocks which throw up at intervals weak stems 1 to 2 feet high, covered with hoary-pubescent leaves. This Eagweed is seldom troublesome in Canada either as a weed on farm land or from liie seeds occurring amonar crop seeds. With the more exten- sive cultivation of grasses and alfalfa for seed in the West, it may be ex- pected that this plant may require more attention. The seed [Plate 55, fig. 59 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] resembles that of the above very closely, but is, as a rule, more regularly oval and without the spines, al- though seeds bearing spines are not uncommon. 52 Plate 24 COMMON RAGWE-ED lAmbrosia arf'emisi^folia, /, Plate 25 STINKING MAYWE-ED lAnrhemis Cotula./. i PLATE 25. STINKING MAYWEED, Anthemis Cotula. L. Other English names : Mayweed, Dog's Chamomile, Dog-fennel. Other Latin name : Maruta Cotula, DC. Introduced. Annual and winter annual. Stems 12 to 18 inches, much branched from the root up, forming a flat topped bunch of white, yellow- eyed, daisy-like flowers, 1 inch across, on slender naked stems. Leaves twice divided, with the secondary leaflets cut into linear segments. Whole plant dull green, slightly hairy and with a strong unpleasant odour. Seeds [Plate 53, fig. 19 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] dirty yellow, small. jV of an inch long, ovate-oblong or oblong, truncate at the upper end with a small knob in the center, abruptly pointed below, 10-ribbed with rows of coarse tubercles, sometimes however, according to Prof. Hillman, nearly smooth. Time of Flowering : Summer to autumn ; seed ripe by July, and young plants sometimes abundant in September. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : A common weed in old settlements, around buildings, along roads and in waste places, from the Atlantic coast to Manitoba, where it is as yet rare and only found along railways, but is rapidly appearing in new districts. Injury : Frequent on cultivated land. The seed a common impurity in clover and grass seeds. Remedy: Clean farming and the use of clean seed. Plants seen in clover fields should be pulled by hand. In the Maritime Provinces the Scentless M-4TWeed, Matricaria inodora, L., is found commonly growing with the above. The two plants resemble each other closely, except that the Scentless Mayweed is a much handsomer plant with flowers nearly 2 inches across and foliage of a dark rich green. It lacks, however, the unpleasant odour and the seeds are entirely different. Although varying much in size and shape among themselves, these are similar in their structural markings. Prof. Hillman describes them, in his most valuable Bulletin, "Nevada "Weeds," Part III, 1897, as "varying in length from one-sixteenth to one-twelfth of an inch : the smaller narrower ones are straight and rather prismatic in form, with truncate ends; large seeds are relatively broader and commonly curved in the direction of one face ; they are sufficiently flattened to present two faces ; three well defined broad ribs extend lengthwise along the usually concave face, broadly con- nected at the apex and meeting at the base ; the opposite convex face ex- hibits the marginal ribs and a short partial central rib leading from the apex and connected with the marginal ridges below two deep depressions, "which are separated by this rib. The surface between the ribs is black and transversely wrinkled." The apex of the seed is excavated and bears the 53 gear of the flower at its center. The two depressions on the concave side give the seed a curions mask-like appearance. These depressions on the white unripe seed are seen as two green swollen translucent glands. Taeeow or MtLFOiL, Achillea Millefoliuvi, L., is a well known plant by waysides and in meadows everywhere from Atlantic to Pacific. In the West is a native form which occurs high up on mountains as well as on the prairies. The erect stems 6 to 18 inches high, bear flat-topped clusters of white flower- heads and finely divided fern-like leaves. The seeds [Plate 56, fig. 61— natural size and enlarged 4 times] are very small, flat and thin, gray with a white margin, about ^ of an inch long and oblong-wedge-shaped; the basal scar is circular and distinct; the apical scar is a small cushion- like prominence from the middle of the broadly notched apex. These seeds are very often found among small grass seeds. 54 Plate 26 OX-EYE DAISY ( Chrysant-hemutT) Leucanfhemum./. > PLATE 26. OX-EYE DAISY, Chrysanthemum Leucanihemum, L. Other English names : White Daisy, White Weed. Other Latin name : Leucanthemum vulgare, Lam. (Xoxious : Dom., Ont.). Introduced. Perennial, shallow-rooted. Steme numerous, simple or little branched, 1 to 3 feet high. Basal leaves spatulate or oblong, crenate or coarsely toothed, narrowed into slender petioles; stem leaves sessile, partly clasping, deeply divided at the base and coarsely toothed above. Flower- heads solitary on long, naked peduncles, very handsome, 1§ to 2 inches across; rays 20 to 30 pure white, spreading, 2 to 3-toothed at the apes; disk tlowers yellow. Seeds club-shaped or elongate-ovate, -^ of an inch in length, usually curved, almost straight on one side, and convex on the other, the knob-like scar at the top prominent ; there are 10 well defined white ridges which run the whole length of the seed, meeting at both ends ; between these ridges the surface of the seed is black minutely dotted with white ; no pappus. Time of Flowering : June; seeds ripe July. Propagation : By short offsets from the woody rootstock ; also more abun- dantly by seeds. Occurrence : Enormously abundant in old pastures, in meadows and by roadsides from the Atlantic coast to the borders of Manitoba, and occasional along the railway to the Pacific coast. Injvry : A rank and aggressive weed in hay meadows, where it soon chokes out the grass. Seeds a common impurity in grass and clover seeds. Remedy : Being a shallow-rooted perennial, the ploiighing down of in- fested sod will kill all of the growing plants. A short rotation including seeding down to clover at short intervals, is probably the best method of cleaning land of this pernicious weed. The Ox-eye Daisy flowers at the time clover is ready to cut for hay, and, if this is done in good season, its seeds cannot ripen ; when the sod is ploughed down, the old plants are destroyed. A plant which is sometimes miscalled the " Ox-eye Daisy " is the beauti- ful Black-eted Co\e-flo\ver, Riidbeclxia hirta, L., widely known as Yellow Daisy and Black-eyed Susan. This showy biennial weed is one of the excep- tions to the usual direction of travel with introduced plants. Most of these have gone with civilization towards the West, but this denizen of the western plains has been brought eastward, probably with the seeds of grasses and clovers, and is now not uncommon in all provinces of Canada. It is a rather coarse rough-hairy biennial with long lanceolate undivided hairy leaves and with flower-heads of the same size as those of the Ox-eye Daisy, with glaring golden orange rays and a dark purple cone-shaped disk. The seeds [Plate 55. fig. 56 — natural size and enlarged 4 timesj are black, 4-ansrled, narrow, with parallel sides about J inch long and without pappus. Mea- dows can be cleared of this weed by mowing, if this is done before the seeds are ripe. 5.5 PLATE 27. LESSER BURDOCK, Ardium Lappa, L., var. minus. Gray. Other English names : Bardane, Common Burdock, Clotbur. Other Latin names: Lappa minor, DC; Arctium minus, Schk. (Noxious : Ont.) Introduced. BienniaL from a deep thick tap root. Root leaves large, heart-shaped, downy beneath, somewhat resembling those of Rhubarb, peti- oles hollow. Flowering stem much branched, from 3 to 6 feet high, flowers purple, flower heads numerous, in clusters at the tips of the branches and in the axils of the upper leaves, | inch across, oval-globular; the scales of the involucre ending with hooks by which the seed-bearing heads become burs and are distributed bv becoming attached to passing animals, etc. Seeds [Plate 56, fig. 62 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] oblong-ovoid, trun- cate at each end, flattened, with about 5 elevated longitudinal lines, gen- erally somewhat curved, pale brown with dark transverse zig-zag depressed marks, apical scar circular with a central point, pappus, when present, con- sisting of several rows of short bristles barbed upwards. 7*17716 of Flowering : Jiily to August ; seed ripe September. Propagation : By seed. Occurrence : Rich land in the older settled provinces ; common in waste places, by roadsides and in orchards in sod. There are two forms of the Burdock found wild in Canada as weeds; by far the commoner is the one figured in our plate, which has much more numerous and smaller flower heads, with the scales of the involucre shorter; the seeds are darker, sometimes showing hardly any pale brown marks; the petioles are hollow, which is not the case in the other and less onramon form, Arctium Lappa, L., (Lappa major, Gaertn., and L. officinalis, All., var. major, Gray). This latter has much larger green flower heads, IJ inches across, with the hooked scales more spreading and has longer peduncles. Remedy : Cut below the crown or spud out when the ground is wet and soft, either the first year, or before the seeds are ripe in the second. 56 Plate n LESSER BURDOCK (Arcrium Lappa /..'.,/ no i n u s . w.'// Plate 28 COMMON RAGWORTOR STINKING WILLIE PLATE 28. COMMON RAGWORT. Senecio ]acob PLATE 32. ORANGE HAWKWEED, Hieracium aurantiacum, L. Other English names: Devil's Paint-brush, Paint-bmsh. (Noxious: Dom.) Introduced. Perennial. Low growing, throwing out many creeping branches close to the ground. Filled with bitter milky sap. llowering stems 1 to 2 feet, erect and simple, almost leafless, bearing at the top a corymb of about a dozen handsome flower-heads nearly an inch across. The fiery orange-red of the flowers is very striking. Leaves spatulate or lanceolate, blunt-pointed, 3 to 8 inches long, tufted, many lying flat on the ground. Whole plant very hairy, the flowering stems clothed with stellate down, black gland-tipi^pfl hairs and long whitp hairs from black tubercles. •Seeds [Plate 56, fig. 66 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] small, r,, to t; of an inch long, linear-oblong, cut off square at the top, pointed at the base, strongly 10-ribbed lengthwise, the tops of the ribs forming a star-like rim rourd the base of the dusky white pappus; colour of seeds purplish-black; unripe seeds deep red. Time of Flowering : June ; seeds ripe July. Propagation : By seed and by creeping stems. U ccurrence : Abundant and very troublesome in the upland pastures of the Eastern Townships of the Province of Quebec and in some places in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. Reported occasionally from Ontario and all the Eastern Provinces. Injury : A vigorous grower which spreads rapidly by means of its run- ners and matures a large quantity of small winged seeds, by means of which it soon overruns land that cannot be ploughed, the abundant and useless foliage taking the place of grass and ruining meadows and pastures. Remedy : Although a vigorous grower, all the roots are close to the surface of the ground. In land used for crops, ploughing down and surface cultivation will kill it. Infested meadows and pastures must be broken up and put under a short rotation of crops. For mountain pastures or uplands where ploughing is difficult, the best treatment is that advised by Prof. L. R. Jones, of Burlington, Vermont, namely, to broadcast dry salt over the patches, so as to fall on the leaves of all the plants, at the rate of li tons to the acre (18 pounds to the square rod). This amount will kill all the plants of Hawkweed but will improve the grass. Beanching Hawkweed, Hieracium cladanthum, Arvet-Touve, MS. In hay meadows and pastures in parts of the Province of Quebec and m many places in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, there is a most pernicious and aggressive weed closely resembling the Orange Hawkweed, but having more numerous and rather smaller pale yellow flowers, narrower and longer leaves, and in strong plants tall flowering stems, sometimes three feet high, bearing a large irregular cymose panicle of flower heads. The lowest branches much elongated, given off even lower down than the middle of the stem, but raising up their flower clusters almost as high 63 as those of the branches above them. On weak plants, such as grow in hay fields, this branching habit is much less conspicuous, and the form resembles much more nearly that of the Orange Hawkweed. The appropriate name of Hieracium cladnnthtim, or the Branching Hawkweed, has been proposed for tills plant by the specialist in this genus, Mr. Arvet-Touve, of Gieres, France. It is just possible that this yellow-flowered Hawkweed, which is now widely known as the Yellow Devil, may merely be the yellow-flowered variety uf the Orange Hawkweed, as the plants of the whole of this group are very variable, but it presents striking differences which seem worth character- izing. Besides the above there is another species of the same group, the King Devil, Hieracium prcealtum, Vill. (Noxious : Dom.), which is found with the above but much more rarely and which is far less aggressive with us in Canada, although it is bitterly complained of to the south of our borders ; this is a much less leafy plant and bears fewer runners. The smaller flower heads are borne in the same way but the corymb is smaller and more spread- ing; the whole plant is less hairy, particularly the stems, and is glaucous. This grayish green colour makes the dark bases of the long hairs on the leaves stand out more conspicuously than on the allied species. The MoxJSE-EAB Hawkweed, Hieracium Pilosella, L., has been intro- duced into Prince Edward Island since many years and has taken almost en- tire possession of some fields and extensive areas along the sides of the public roads. It is even a worse pest than the different species mentioned above. It is a mat-like prostrate plant, which produces long running leafy stems on the surface of the ground ; these produce tufts of roots and side shoots at very short intervals, the latter being densely clothed with clusters of leaves, which are smooth above, except for some very conspicuous long white bristles, and are covered beneath with a thick felt of star-shaped hairs. The flower heads are solitary, on slender stalks, pale yellow, over an inch across and sweetly scented. The seeds are a little longer than those of the Orange Hawkweed, but the seeds of all the four Hawkweeds here mentioned are prac- tically indistinguishable; all, however, are liable to occur in grass seeds of which they are a dangerous impurity. The agricultural treatment for the eradication of all is the same and consists mainly of a short rotation with seeding down to clover and grass at short intervals. Acpordins? to Dr. X. L. Britton (Flora of the Xorthern States and Can- ada, 1901), the Prince Edward Island Mnttse-ear Hawkweed is the variety Peleieriamim, Mer., of Hieracium Pilosella. The typical form of the species is found occasionally in the other provinces, having been introduced with European grass seeds. 64 Plate 33 BLUE LETTUCE I Lacfuca pulchella di) PLATE 33. BLUE LETTUCE, Laduca pulchclla. DC. Other English names : Showj' Lettuce, Large-flowered Blue Lettuce. Other Latin names: Mulgedium pulchellum, Nutt.; Mulgedium acu- minatum, DC; Sonchus pulcliclliis, Pursh. Native. Perennial, deep-rooted. Stems 2 to 3 feet, leafy below. Whole plant smooth and glaucous, filled with milky juice. Leaves very variable, nnear-lanceolate or oblong; entire, simply or runcinately dentate, or pin- uatifid ; stem leaves less divided and sessile. Flower heads nearly 1 inch across, pale blue, rather few, on scaly peduncles in a narrow panicle. Sef-<1< [Plate 56, fig. 68 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] about ,',., of an inch, one-quurter of which is a short thick beak; tip of beak expanded into a short cup-shaped disk; slaty gray when ripe, red when immature;, club-shaped, flattened, with thick rib-like margins and with narrower ridgea down each face; in some seeds one or more of these ridges much thickened, whole surface dull and rough ; pappus pure white and silky. Time of Flowering : June, July ; seed ripe by end of July. Propagation : By seeds and by fleshy running rootstocks. Occurrence: Prairie Provinces and British Columlua. In moist or sandy soil, particularly where there is some alkali. Injury: A deep-rooted and persistent perennial weed. Remedy : Early summer-fallowing. The Peicklt Lettuce, Lactuca Scariola, L. (Xoxious : Man.) This coarse-growing prickly-leaved annual has spread rapidly through Canada during the past four or five years. Although, as a rule, it occurs most com- monly in waste places, the seeds [Plate 56, fig. 67 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] are frequently found among crop seeds. These are dark gray, sim- ilar to those of the black-seeded varieties of the garden lettuce, usually a little smaller, and like them are broadly lance-shaped and somewhat curved, tiattened, margined and bearing -5 to 7 narrow ridges down each face ; whole surface roughened, with very short white bristles on the ridges near the apes; beak as long as the seed, very slender and often twisted; pappus white. In the Eastern parts of Canada, where the Prickly Lettuce is now common in many places, plants average 3 to 5 feet in height ; but in the Okanagan val- ley of British Columbia plants were found some years ago which were 8 feet high. The leaves are oblong-lanceolate, spiny margined and prickly on the midrib beneath, more or less pinnately divided, sessile with ear-like lobes at the base. The flower heads are pale yellow, less than i inch across and only a few open at a time on the large wide-spreading panicle. The leaves of the stem are twisted at the clasping base so as to stand vertically with the edge to the sun, instead of horizontally, as in the case of the leaves of most plants. This peculiarity has given rise to a common name of this lettuce, the Compass Weed. It is claimed by some botanists that the Prickly Lettuce, which is found in waste places in Canada, is the European Lactuca virosa, L. ; but the two are difficult to separate with certainty. For the meantime it seems prefer- able to use the best-known name L. Scariola. (.5) ♦ 6.5 PLATE 34. PERENNIAL SOWTHISTLE, Sonchus arvensis, L. Other English names : Field Sowthistle, Creeping Sowthistle, Corn Sowthistle (in England), also sometimes incorrectly called the Russian Thistle, which howeTsr is an entirely different plant belonging to the Spinach family. (Noxious: Dom., Man., N.W.) Introduced. Perennial, very deep-rooted with large and vigorous run- ning rootstocks. Stems 1 to 4 feet high, hollow, simple, with few leaves, and branching at the top. Whole plant filled with a bitter milky juice. Leaves 6 to 12 inches long, pointed, deeply cut, clasping the stem at their base and edged with soft spines. Flowers bright yellow, lA inches across, in corymbs, closing in strong sunlight ; flower cup and flower stalk covered in the common form with long glandular hairs. A perfectly smooth and glaucous variety is common in parts of New Brunswick and also occurs at Port Hope, Ontario. Seeds [Plate 54, fig. 22 — natural size and enlarged 8 times I brown, oblong, somewhat flattened, about J inch long, ridged botli lengthwise and across, bearing at the top a copious tuft of very white silky hairs, which spre-id in drj'ing and enable the seed to be carried long dis- tances by the wind. Time of Flowering : June to August ; seed ripe Julv to September. Propagation : Very rapid, by seeds and running rootstocks. Occurrence : Abundant in cultivated fields and along roadsides from the Atlantic coast to Manitoba, where it is becoming very noticeable and giving much anxiety in the Eed Eiver Yalley. Injury: The Perennial Sowthistle, from its vigorous running root- stocks and the large amount of seeds it matures, is one of the most aggressive enemies of the Canadian farmer. Wherever it establishes itself, it causes great loss both in reducing the yields of crops and on account of the great difficulty in eradicating it. Remedy: The adoption of a regular tliree-year or other short rotation of crops is the only hope of clearing a farm infested with this weed. This plan has been used with great success at Ottawa by Mr. Grisdale in cleaning a field badly infested with Perennial Sowthistle. In the West summer- fallowing must be done early and the laud cultivated as often as necessary to keep down the fresh growths as they appear. If still abundant on the land, this should be plowed late in fall and seeded down the following year or used for a crop of oats or barley, to be sown late after spring cultivation and cut green for feed. When this plant first appears in new localities, thi; Howering stems should be pulled by hand as soon as the blossoms show in a growing crop so as to prevent the seed ripening. For land not under spring crop, j)lough deeply in -Tune and follow wiUi rape. la obtusely 3 to 5-angled in outline, and instead of the pit at inner angle and the two conical projections on an excavated surface, has a convex surface with two light-coloured distinct cones, one at the inner angle and the other opposite beyond the middle of the area. This weed is abundant in western Ontario and is troublesome in fields of fall wheat. It is a widely branching biennial or winter annual with white flowers, and produces a large crop of seeds, which ripen early. The seed is commonly found in poorly cleaned fall wheat and rye and also in timothy, mammoth clover and alsike seeds. Land is best cleaned by adopting a short rotation, including grain sown in spring instead of in autumn. Plants which germinate in autumn can be destroyed by fall or spring ploughing. 69 PLATE 36. BLUE BUR, Echmospermum Lappula, Lehm. Other Englisli names : Stictweed, Sheep Bur. Other Latin names : Myosotis Lajrpula, L. ; Lappula Lappula (L.) Karst. (Noxious: N. W.) Introduced. Annual and winter annual. Erect, branching onlj- above or from the base. Whole plant covered with short white hairs, which give it a grayish appearance. Leaves linear-oblong; root leaves about 3 inches, narrowed at base; stem leaves, sessile. Flowers small, pale blue, about J inch across, erect, in leafy-bracted, more or less one-sided racemes. Seeds (nutlets) [Plate 56, fig. 71 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] about \ inch, dark brown, pear-shaped, surface very rough ; inner face sharply angled, outer face rounded, bare of spines in the centre but having on the sides a double series of long stiff spines, each of which has at its apex a star of from 3 to 4 sharp hooks. Tivie of Flowering : From June ; seeds ripe July. Propagation: By 'seed only. Occurrence : By roadsides and in waste places in the East. In the West chiefly in corrals and around buildings, but recently spreading with alarming rapidity into cultivated land, where it is sometimes abundant on fields left for summer-fallowing. Injury : Seed very troublesome as a bur in wool ; also frequently found as an impurity in commercial seeds, when many or all of the long barbed bristles may be rubbed off, but there is no trouble in recognizing it from the angled inner face with the small basal scar at the bottom of the cen- tral ridge, and the unarmed area on the outer face. Remedy: Early summer-fallowing; fall or spring ploughing. Sow clean seed. Plate 36 BLU& BURoR ST1CKSE-&D t Echinos perm u m Lappu la . /.'■/ THE MORNING-GLORY FAMILY, COXrOU'ULACE.E. The plants of this family possess marked characteristics liy which they are easily recognized: /. e., the twining stems, the trumpet-shaped tlowers, and the globose cartilaginous capsules with distinct divisions. There are three species of Morning-glorj% including among those plants which are classed as weeds, the notorious Field Bindweed, the Hedge or Great Bind- weed, Convolvulus scpium, L., var. americanus, Sims, which sometimes gives trouble for a year or two after land is broken in the Prairie Provinces, and the Upright Bindweed, Convolvulus spithamceus, L., which occasionally is complained of in sandy land. Closely allied to the Morning-glories are the Dodders, belonging to a small natural order, the Cuscutacew. These are curious leafless parasites occurring as loose tangled masses of fleshj' threads, with clusters of flowers or small round pods at short intervals, attached to various plants, from which they draw their nourishment. The abundant occurrence of Dodder seeds among Alfalfa and Clover seeds offered for sale during recent years, as well as the presence of the parasite in large quantity in some fields of Alfalfa in Ontario, has given rise to much interest in these plants. The Dodder, the seeds of which are- most frequently found as impurities with those of Alfalfa and Clovers, is the Alfalfa Dodder, Cuscuta epithymum, Murr., formerly known as Cuscuta trifolii, Bab., because it so often infested Clover (Trifolium). These seeds [Plate 54, fig. 34 — twice natural size and en- larged 8 times] are small yellow or brown bodies varying in diameter from inj to o'jj^ of an iurh, irrea-ularly globose, and more or less anojed on the inner scar-bearing side; the surface is granular-roughened, and these seeds are very apt to be overlooked from their lack of distinct characters. When soaked, the embryo is seen to be a spirally coiled worm-like body without any seed-leaves. Mr. G. H. Clark, the Seed Commissioner of the Department of Agri- culture, who has taken much trouble to investigate the origin of the Dodder seeds found in Canadian commercial seeds, has detected the seeds of another species in South American seeds, which he has identified as Cuscuta race- mosa, Mart., var. chiliana, Eng. These seeds are about twice as large as those of Alfalfa Dodder and have a more rounded contour and a much larger and more distinct flat basal scar. These large seeds are, owing to their size, much more difficult to clean out of clover seeds than the com- mon variety, and should be watched for carefully in clover and alfalfa seed. PLATE 37. FIELD BINDWEED, Comoloulus arvemis, L. Other English names: Bindweed, Small Bindweed, European Bind- weed, Small-flowered Morning-glory. (Noxious : Dom., N. W.) Introduced. Perennial, deep-rooting, with extensive creeping cord-lik» fleshy rootstocks; these throw up numerous slender branching and twining smoo'th stems, which form thick mats on the surface of the land, and twist around any plants growing within reach, using them as supports and chok- ing them out. Leaves about 1 to 1^ inches long on slender stalks, ovate or heart-shaped, arrow-shaped at base. Flower-stalks slender, 1 to 2-flowered, about the same length as the leaves, bracted at some distance below the large open funnel-shaped pink flowers, which are over an inch across. Seeds [Plate 56, fig. 72 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] rather large, } of an inch, dark brown, pear-shaped ; outer face convex, inner bluntly angled with liat sides. Surface roughened with small tubercles; basal scar, two smooth pale areas in a depression at the lower end of the inner face. Cap- sules globose, cartilaginous, 2-celled, containing 3 to 4 seeds. Embryo much folded and crumpled in the seed. Time of Flowering : From June throughout the summer ; seeds ripe in August. Propagation : By seeds and by running rootstocks, every portion of which will produce new plants if broken up by the plough. It i? notice- able that in many localities, as at Ottawa, this plant produces few seeds. It has, however, everywhere a most persistent habit of growth and deserves perhaps more than any other agricultural pest the appellation of "the worst weed in Canada." Occurrence : Although very widespread throughout the Dominion and in restricted localities very troublesome, the Field Bindweed, fortunately, cannot as yet be called a common weed of Canada. Injury : Exceedingly hard to eradicate, from its almost incredible per- sistence, owing to the vitality in the fleshy rootstocks. Remedy : A short rotation including late sown roots or other hopd crops, rape being very useful for this purpose. Frequent use of a broad-shared cultivator will destroy new growths and exhaust the vitality of the plants. Great care should always be taken to sow no crop seeds containing those of (he Field Bindweed. Applications of salt, lime, or straw, sometimes recom- mended to kill this weed arc u^pIpss when used in practical quantities. i Plate 37 FIELD BINDWEED (Convolvulus arvGnsis.A.) THE FIG WORT FAMILY, SCROPHULARIACE.^. This large family, which includes the poisonous Foxglove (Digitalis) of Europe, does not contribute many farm weeds in Canada. The plants are remarkably variable in appearance, and in no order except perhaps the Orchids are there so many varieties of irregular corollas. The leaves pre- sent almost every form. The flowers are usually in spikes as in the Mul- leins, or in panicles as in the rank-smelling Figworts, occasionally axillary and solitary as in the aromatic Musk. The Corolla is of 4 or 5 petals, either slightly united at the base or completely into a tube. The fruit is a 2-celled capsule which opens when ripe and allows the numerous seeds to drop out. In this family we find the Speedwells (Veronica), some species of which are troublesome weed's on lawns, the introduced Red Bartsia, Bartsia Odontites, Iluds., and the Glandular Eyebright, Euphrasia latifolia, Pursh, both rather common pasture weeds in Prince Edward Island, and the persistent deep- rooted perennial weed the Toad Fl.4X, Linaria vulgaris. Mill., common and injurious in all parts of Eastern Canada and gradually spreading into Mani- toba. Where this plant has established itself, a short rotation of crops is essential. The showy pale yellow flowers with orange lips, nearly an inch long, are borne erect in dense racemes; the two-lobed corolla is closed and mouth-like, but, by gentle pressure at the sides, it opens and closes like the muzzle of an animal. The flat black disk-like winged seeds [Plate 54, fig. 30 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] are about one-tenth of an inch in diameter and are often found in grass seeds. They are easily recognized from other seeds amongst which they occur, both by their shape and dark colour. THE VERBENA FAMILY, VERBEXACE.-E. Is a small order allied to the Mint family and contains two or three tall herbaceous plants with small flowers, which are meadow and pasture weeds and of which the small seed-like nutlets are often found in grass seeds. The commonest of these is that of the Blue Vervain, Verbena hastata, L. [Plate 54, fig. 31 — natural size and enlarged 8 times]. It is brown in colour except the large whitish basal scar at the bottom of the inner face. The outer face is convex, irregularly ridged lengthwise and sharply angled at the sides. The inner face slopes to the margin from a sharply angled central ridge. THE MINT FAMILY, LABIAT.E. This large family contains several weeds, some of which are of com- mon occurrence, but none of which are of much importance agriculturally. The characters of the family are well marked and easily recognized. A noticeable feature of these plants is the production of pleasantly aromatic and oily secretions as in the case of Lavender, Mint, Peppermint, Sage, Thyme, Eosemary, Bergamot, Patchouli, and many others which are used for the production of perfumes or in cooking. Xo plant in this large order is poisonous. Salient characters of this family are a square stem, often downy, a strong scent when bruised, leaves always opposite and simple, flowers generally clustered in the axils of the leaves, corolla irregular, more or less mouth-shaped with large wide open lips, the lower of which is gen- erally much larger. The fruit of these plants consists of the 4 lobes of the ovary, which when ripe fall apart and become 4 seed-like niitlets or achenes 7.3 lying loose at tlie botiom of the calyx. Few plants of the Mint family are troublesome enemies of the farmer on properly worked land, but the nut- lets of a few are often found in commercial seeds. One of the most strik- ing of these is that of the Catxep, Nepeta Cataiia, L. [Plate 54, fig. 33— natural size and enlarged 8 times], which is often found in Clover seed, it is about one-sixteenth of an inch long, reddish brown, roundly oval, a little tiattened on the inner face. At the bottom of this face is the remark- a))le basal scar which has two clear white eye-like cavities, one on each side of it above. The nutlets of the Deagoxhead, Dracocephalmn parvifiorum, Xutt. [Plate 54, fig. 32 — natural size* and enlarged 8 times], and of the Haiey Mint, Stachys palustris, Nutt. [Plate 56, fig. 73 — natural size* and enlarged 4 times], have of recent years been found abundantly among the screenings of western wheat and occasionally also among the gram. These two seeds or nutlets are superficially much alike, but, when compared together, those of the Dragonhead are longer (J inch) and narrower, being twice as long as wide, more angular and somewliat winged or wrinkled along the angles near the apex. The basal scar is large and curved, with a slit in the middle, giv- ing it the appearance of a mouth; colour dark brown; the outer convex face very indistinctly ridged lengthwise and granular-roughened. In the Hairy Mint, the nutlets are smoother, dull black, rounded, nearly as wide as long, the inner face only slightly angled at the centre and edges, the scar merely a pale spongy spot at the sharp end of the nutlet. Somewhat resembling at first sight the nutlets of Labiates are the seeds of the Sun Spurge, Euphorbia Helioscopia, L. [Plate 56, fig. T7 — natural size and enlarged 4 times]. When examined closely, however, they are easily recognized. They are rounded-oval in outline, rolling freely on a smooth surface, a little flattened on the inner face, with a central sharp ridge running to the apex; sides of the seeds not angled, as in those of the Mint family, scar kidney-shaped, white and very conspicuous, hollowed out at the base of the inner face; the whole surface of the seed coarsely netted with raised lines. These seeds have been found several times among vege- table and garden seeds. THE RIBWORT FAMILY, PLAXTAGINACEyE. This family in Canada embraces a few species of weedy stemless plants with inconspicuous flowers borne in long slender spikes at the top of bare flower-stalks or scapes. The fruit is a membranous capsule the upper part of which, when the seeds are ripe, drops ofE whole like the lid of a box. Although some species are very abundant on farm lands, they demand atten- tion of farmers far more from the frequency with which the seeds are found among those of clovers and grasses than as trotiblesome weeds in fields. From their colour the seeds are very conspicuous among grass seeds, and on account of their size they are difficult to separate from them. This renders a knowledge of the appearance of the common kinds very import- ant. The seeds of plantains may be roughly separated into two groups according to their shape : in one division, the seeds are irregularly angular like small grains of gun powder, e.g., the Common Plantain and the Pale Plantain: i'n the other, they are boat-shaped, hollow on one side and rounded on the other, e.g., the Narrow-leaved Plantain or Eibgrass, and the Bracted Plantain. All of these seeds develop a coat of mucilage when thoroughly wetted, by means of which their distribution is much facilitated. * The figure to show the natural size is slightly too large. 74 Plate 38 ^^^^I^S:^^^*- COMMON PLANTAIN < Plan l-ago major, /, ) PLATE 38. COMMON PLANTAIN, Planlago major, L. Other English names : Broad-leaf Plantain, Greater Plantain, Door- yard Plantain, Bird-seed Plantain. Introduced and native. Perennial. Eootstock short and thick, erect, bearing many thick spreading roots and a large tuft of dark green oval, long-pet ioled, coarsely toothed, spreading or ascending leaves and several long dense spikes 3 to 12 inches long of inconspicuous flowers with purple anthers. Seed capsules oval, dividing about the middle. Seeds [Plate 54, fig. 25 — natural size and enlarged S times] greenish brown, verj- variable in size and shape, according to the number in the capsule, which varies on differ- ent plants from 8 to 16, rounded on the outer face, angular on the inner or sear side; scar pale and cousjiicuous ; the surface of the seed is finely netted with broken waved lines of dark brown, which radiate from the scar, average length one-twentieth of an inch. Time of Flowering : May, throughout the summer; seed ripe in July. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : In various forms, some of which may be distinct species as indicated by the difference in habit and the degree of pubescence. Through- out the Dominion. Generally growing in rich moist soil. Injury : Troublesome in meadows from reducing the grade of the seed and causing much extra expense in cleaning the seeds of grasses and clovers. On lawns the flat rosettes of leaves crowd out the grass and give an untidy appearance. Remedy : Meadows to be left for seed should be thoroughly cleaned with hoed crops or by other special means and seeded down with well cleaned seed. In removing Plantains from lawns, a sharp knife should be run round deeply close to the crown, and the plant removed. This method dis- figures the lawn far less than by digging out all the roots. The Paxe Plaxtain, Plantago Rugellii, Dec. Occurring with the Com- mon Plantain, may often be found a rather larger plant with more erect smooth leaves of a paler or yellowish green, with the leaf-stalks purple at the base. The spikes are longer, and the flowers less crowded. The cap- sules more pointed, 4 to 9-seeded, opening below the middle. Seeds [Plate 54, fig. 26 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] of the same angular shape as those of the Common Plantain, but about twice as large, and nearly black, with the surface merely roughened, not lined and netted. The seeds are a very common impurity in those of Timothy and Alsike. PLATE 39. RIBGRASS, Planiago lanceolala, L. Other English names: Buckhorn, English Plantain, Ribwort. (?soxious: Dom.) Introduced. Perennial or biennial. Rootstock short and erect. Leaves numerous, 2 to 12 inches long, narrowly lanceolate and distinctly 3 to 5- ribbed, hairy and with tufts of brownish hairs at the base. In thj first year the leaves lie close to the ground, forming a close rosette; on old plants they are erect. Flower stalks stiif, slender and grooved, 1 to 2 feet, much taller than the leaves. Flower heads at first ovoid and rather showy by reason of their numerous yellow anthers, elongating with age and forming dense cylindrical black spikes of seed, from 1 to 4 inches long. Capsules oblong, very obtuse, 2-seeded, opening about the middle. Seeds [Plate 54, fig. 28 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] chestnut brown, minutely granular- roughened, but highly polished, boat-shaped, with rounded ends, the outer face rounded with the edges folded inward around a deep longitudinal groove, in the centre of which lies the dark coloured scar which sometimes has a pale ring of dried mucilage around it. Time of Flowering : Throughout the summer; seed ripe by July. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : From Atlantic to Pacific, but much commoner in some places than in others. "Widely distributed with the seeds of clovers and grasses. Injury : The chief injury by Eibgrass is due to the presence of the seeds among those of grasses and clovers grown for sale. The plant itself is palatable to stock and provides fodder of fair quality, although inferior to the true grasses. Remedy : The ploughing down of infested meadows, and re-sowing with clean seed. The plants can be removed from lawns in the same way as the Common Plantain. The Hoary Pl.\xt.\in, Plaiitago media, L. A plant which is much less frequently seen than Eibgrass but which has the same wide range, from the seed having been distributed with those of grasses, is the Hoary Plantain. This has the ovate leaves thickly covered with white hairs, short-stalked and always lying close to the ground in a dense rosette. It is deep-rooted and more difficult to eradicate from lawns by spudding than the other species here mentioned. The flower stalks are slender and about a foot high. Flower heads showy by reason of their purple filaments and white anthers, at first oval, gradually elongating to cylindrical spikes 1 to 3 inches long, flowers pleasantly fragrant. Capsules oblong, 2 to H-seeded, seed of the boat-shaped class*, of about the same size as that of Eibgrass, but thinner and flatter, often somewhat twisted, with the edges not so roundly turned in around the groove which bears the scar. Many seeds [Plate 54, fig. 27 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] show an indistinct shallow groove or Plate39 RIBGRASS I Planrago lanceolara./.i constriction across the outer face just below the middle, indicating the part of the seed which fitted into the top of the capsule; these seeds have that part somewhat narrower and the margin more folded over the scar-groove. The Hoary Plantain is intermediate in appearance between the Com- mon Plantain and the Eibgrass, and its seeds are intermediate between those of Eibgrass and of the Bracted Plantain. The Beacted Plaxtaix, Plantago aristata, Michx. This annual Plan- tain is a western plant which is rather uncommon in Canada, although its seeds are not uncommon in grass and clover seed in our seed trade. It has narrow linear grass-like leaves, the whole plant is downy, flower sialks erect, bearing thick cylindrical spikes 1 to 4 inches long, with conspicuous pointed bracts. Capsules 2-seeded. The seeds [Plate o4, fig. 2'J — natural size and enlarged 8 times] are boat-shaped, of the same size and form as those of Eibgrass, but are slightly wider, with sharper edges to the margin of the inner face. The elongated scar consists of two small shallow pita lying close together in the centre of the inner excavated fare, the whole of which is whitened by a coating of dried mucilage. The rounded outer face has a distinct shallow groove crossing it just below the middle. This groove and the two pits of the scar present the best characters for distinguishing this seed. THE SPINACH OR QOOSEFOOT F/AMILY, CHENOPODIACE.^. The Spinach family contains many weedy plants, some of which are aggressive enemies of the agriculturist. Among these is the so-called Eus- sian Thistle (Noxious: Man., N.W.), and also the Lamb's-quarters, which is probably the most abundant weed in all parts of the country. The flowers, which are almost always green and insignificant, have no corolla; each flower produces only a single seed within a bladder-like covering known as a utricle; but seeds are borne in enormous numbers on each plant. Some plants in this natural order supply wholesome articles of food, as the Spinach, Beetroot, Garden Orache and Lamb's-quarters. 77 PLATE 40. LAMB'S-QUARTERS. Chenopodium album, L. Other English names : Pigweed, Fat-hen, White Goosefoot. Introduced and native. Annual. Extremely variable in every char- acter. Mostly a tall succulent herbaceous annual with a slender, erect, grooved, much branched stem, 2 to 6 feet high, with angular-ovate, pale green, coarsely toothed leaves, narrowed at the base and borne on slender foot-stalks. Flowers in compound spikes from the axils of the leaves ; whole plant more or less covered with white or pink mealy particles. Plants found late in the season are of a much darker green colour and have the leaves less angled. Seed [Plate 54, fig. 35 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] about ^V of an inch, circular in outline, more or less flattened on one side, strongly convex on the other; edges bluntly rounded; the lower convex face grooved from the margin to the central scar ; seed shining black, minutely wrinkled, enclosed in a very thin papery seed vessel, called a utricle. The seeds, as found among crop seeds, have this thin seed vessel closely adlierui'.- to the seed as a brown or gray mealy deposit, which gives them a granular- roughened appearance; they also often have the dried 5-angled calyx closed tightly over them. "When plants are picked or shaken roughly after the seeds are ripe, but while the plant is still green, the seeds fall out of the calyx very easily. Some seeds may also be found in screenings of grain, from which the brittle black coat has been partially broken away, when the j-ellnw rinir-like embryo will be seen surrounding the darker central portion of the seed. A much larger seed, -^ of an inch in diameter, of exactly the same appearance as the above, and which is sometimes found in crop seeds with it, is that of the Maple-leaved Goosefoot, Chenopodium hybridum, L. Time of Flowering and Seeding : From June to frost. Propagation: By seed. Occurrence : Everywhere, in rich land. Injury : A gross feeder and a vigorous rapid grower, which in seasons favourable to its growth crowds and chokes out growing crops. Seed very abundant in all kinds of commercial seeds. Remedy : Harrowing growing crops of cereals when the grain plants are three inches high will destroy myriads of the young seedlings of this and all other annual weeds among grain, which have germinated in the top 1 or 2 inches of soil, without injury to the much deeper-rooted drilled-in grain. When the plants are in small numbers or in clover grown for seed, pull by hand. Late plants growing in hoed crops should be carefully destroyed to lireveut the seed from falling. I 7S Plate 40 LAMB'S QUARTERS or PIGWEED ( Chenopodium album./..) Place4l RUSSIAN PIGWEED ( Ax^ns amaranfoides./. ) PLATE 41. RUSSIAN PIGWEED, Axyris amarantoiJes, L. (Noxious: N.W.) Introdueed. Annual. A tall coarse plant from 2 to 4 feet high, erect and widely branching, very leafy. Stems grooved, rather pale at base, twigs and lower side of upper leaves covered with rusty pubescence. Leaves lanceolate, on short petioles, sparsely toothed. Flowers of two kinds; spikes of anther- hearing flowers, from half an inch to 3 inches long, terminate every branch- let, and fertile flowers cluster the branchlets thickly below these, each one producing a single seed. Seeds [Plate 56, fig. 74 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] oval, flattened, j\ of an inch, gray, with a silky lustre; sur- face minutely lined and wrinkled lengthwise; basal scar a short Jeep groove across the lower end; many seeds have the close-fitting utricle or cartila- ginous covering projecting above the top as a two-lobed wing; this covering is beautifully mottled with white zig-zag lines on a brown ground. Embryo in a curved ring or loop around the outside of the central portion of the seed. Russian Pigweed when young has somewhat the appearance of Lamb's-quar- lers, but is a paler green, has a more wand-like habit of growth and, instead of being mealy, is softly pubescent with short star-shaped hairs. When full- growii, the whole plant forms a large pyramidal compound raceme; and, when mature, the stems, bracts and papery calyx segments turn white and make this weed very conspicuous. '/'tnie of t'lowering : June; seed ripe July-August. fropnpation : By seeds. Carried by the wind. The broken off plants and branches become tumbling weeds, by which the range of this Pigweed has been much extended. Occurrence : The species was first noticed in Canada in 1886 by the r )adside at Headingley, 10 miles west of Winnipeg in Manitoba, to which place it was said to have been brought direct from Russia. It is now found along the lines of railway throughout the North-west, and has even been detected on a railway bank as far east as Sherbrooke, P.Q. Injury : A leafy, gross feeding, wide-rooting annual which crowds grow- ing crops and gives a very weedy appearance to farm lands. The thick woody stems are very troublesome when crops are being harvested. The abundant seeds, somewhat like small gray flax seeds, are found commonly in grain from a few districts infested by this rank-growing weed. It is, therefore, most important that every care should be taken to prevent it from spreading from roadsides and waste places, as it has every characteristic of a bad and aggressive enemy. Remedy : Harrowing out young seedlings from a growing grain crop, in thr; same way as Lamb's-quarters. Hand-pulling when not too abundant. Mowing and' burning plants by waysides, along railways and in waste places. 79 THE PIGWEED FAMILY, AMARANTACE^. The Pigweeds are a small family of plants, mostly of tropical origin, very closely allied with the Chenopods or Spinach family. All of them witji us are coarse -weedy annuals of rich land in gardens and uu farms. The flowers are small and inconspicuous, and they produce enormous quantities of small highly polished, lens-shaped, more or less margined seeds. The leaves are simple and petioled. Some of the exotic members of this family are gorgeously coloured and are grown for their ornamental foliage or in- florescence, as the Cockscombs (Celosia), the Eainbow Amaranth, Amarantus tricolor, and the well known Love-lies-bleeding, Amarantus caudatus, L. The seeds are I erne singly as in the Spinach family, and enclosed in a thin cartilaginous covering known botanically as a utricle. PLATE 4.2. REDROOT PIGWEED. Amarantus Tctroflexus, L. Other English names : Rough Pigweed, Chinaman's Greens. (Xoxious : X.W.) Introduced. A-iinual. with a rosy nink tap-rnnt. Stems erect .';imnle or branched, rough pubescent. Leaves long-petioled, ovate, bristle-pointed. Flowers inconspicuous, numerous, crowded on thick compound spikes at the ends of the branches and in the axils of the leaves. Bracts of the flowers bristle-pointed, longer than the green sepals. Seed [Plate 54, fig. 36 — natural size and enlarered 8 timesl hia-hlv polished, reddish black to iet black, about tt't of an inch in diameter, circular or egg-shaped in outline, much flattened and equally convex on both sides ; poorly filled seeds have a narrow slightly flattened marginal band, which marks the location of the rirg-like embrvo lying round the outside of the seed. The basal scar is a light point on the edge of the feed where the two tips of the embryo meet, and has a low de- pression around it on both faces of the seed. Time of Flowering : July to September: seed ripe by August. Propagation : By seed. Orcurrence : In all crops. Thoroughly established in all the settled por- tions of the Dominion. Abundant in waste places around farm buildings and in gardens. Widely spread by the seeds, which occur commonly in all commercial seeds. Injury : A large weedy plant whi<"h crowds crops and increases the labour of working land. Seeds common in tliose of grasses and clovers. Remedy : Can be controlled by shallow cultivation and hand-pulling. The TrMnLE Weed, Amarantus albus, L. Another Amaranth which is very abundant throuphout the country, but particularly so in the West, is the Tumble Weed, a bushy branched erect or procumbent annual weed with whitish stems and small oval or spatulate leaves, in the axils of most of which, on old plants, are small clusters of flowers or seeds. When mature. 80 REDROOT PIGWEED I Amaranl-us rerroflexus./. " these plants break off at the ground and are blown long distances by the wind, scattering their seeds as they go. The seeds are much like those of the Eed root Pigweed, and although averaging ruther smaller, about ^V of an inch, cannot always be distinguished from them when found among other crop seeds. Spreading Amaeanth, Amarantus blitoides, Watson. This species re- sembles the Tumble Weed very much, but has rather larger rounder leaven and prostrate diffusely branching rather fleshy stems, which form large mats attached by the central root. This is a native annual plant of the western prairies, but is frequent along railways in the East, and the seeds are often found in alfalfa, clover and grass seeds from the Western States. The seeds can be easily distinguished from those of the Tumble Weed by their large size, t\ of an inch, which is nearly twice that of the other Rpepieo. Unless closely examined, the seeds of the Amaranths may sometimes be con- fused with rubbed seeds of the Lamb's-quarters. The surface of the former, however, is always more highly polished and smoother. The character of ihe scar will be found the easiest point for distinguishing them, being a central point with a long groove on one side in the Chenopods, and a notch in tho margin in the Amaranths. The seeds of the Lamb's-quarters and of the Ecd- root Pigweed are small and of about the same size ; those of the Maple-leave J Goosefoot and of the Spreading Amaranth are both nearly twice as big and compare with each other in a similar manner. 81 (6) THE BUCKWHEAT FAMILY, POLYGONACE^. The Buckwheat family contains several weedy plants, some of which are troublesome on farms. The objectionable members of the family all belong to two genera, the Docks (Rumex), and the Smartweeds, or Knotweeds (folygonum). Many of these require some attention to keep them under control, but none can be said to be very difficult to eradicate on well-kept farms. The Docks are tall-stemmed perennial weeds with tap-roots, found in pastures and meadows; they live for many years but, with few exceptions, as in the case of the Sheep Sorrel, do not spread from the root. The achenes enclosing the seeds are shaped like those of the buckwheat, being triangular in cross section, or as the name buckwheat (which is merely a corruption of beechwheat) indicates, shaped like small beechnuts. There is no true corolla, the achenes being surrounded merely by the 6-parted calyx, 3 segments of which are small and the other 3 large, wing-like and variously shaped and veined in the different species. One or all three of these wings may bear a seed-like-corky tubercle on the outside. The "seeds" of all species are much alike, and the wing-like segments, often found at- tached to the seeds as they occur among crop seeds, are a great help in recog- nizing the different species. The weeds of the Knotweed and Smartweed division of the family are found in' three rather distinct groups of the genus Polygonum : (1) The Knotweeds are well represented by the very common Dookweed, Polygonum aviculare, L., which accompanies civilized man everywhere, and is found along roads and trails, forming mats of spreading wiry jointed stems with a leaf, a pair of silvery scales and a small cluster of flowers at each joint, each flower producing a slender reddish-brown triangular achene iV of an inch long. (2) The Smartweeds, or Persicaries, are represented by several plants of various habits, some are perennials with extensive running rootstocks, as the Swamp Peesicaiiy, Polygonum Muhlenbergii, "Wat., which is sometimes very persistent in low undrained spots, others are fleshy-stemmed annuals, as the Ladt's-thumb, Polygonum Persicaria, L., the shining black, yW of an inch, ovate heart-shaped, hollowed out on one side or roundly triangular seeds (achenes) of which [Plate 54, fig. 37 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] are frequently found among the seeds of grasses and clover, and the Dock- leaved Peesicaet, Polygonum lapathifoliiim, L., a common tall-growing and rather aggressive weed among grain and clover on rich low land in all parts of Eastern Canada. The "seeds" of the latter, which also occur with the above, are yV of an inch long, more roundly heart-shaped, chocolate brown, hollowed on both faces and never triangular. A larger (J inch) blackish "seed" clo.->ely resembling both of the preceding, but more fre- quently bearing the spike-like base of the pistil at the tip, is that of the IrLANDtrLAR Persicary, Polygonum pennsylvanicum, L. The "seeds" of this plant, as those of the Lady's-thumb, are sometimes triangular. (S) The third group contains plants mostly with twining or climbing stems and with arrow-head-shaped leaves, as the Wild Buckwheat [Plate 43]. S2 Plate 43 WILD BUCKWHEAT OR BLACK BINDWEED (Polygonum Convolvulus./.) PLATE 43. WILD BUCKWHEAT. Polygonum Concolculus, L. Other English name : Black Bindweed. Introduced. Annual. A twining vine with rather rough branching stems and thin, smooth, arrow-head-shaped leaves. Flowers greenish, droop- ing, on short slender pedicels, in small clusters from the axils of the leaves and in loosely flowered terminal racemes. Calyx 5-parted, persistent, close- ly wrapped around the single dull black triangular seed (achene) [Plate .56, fig. 75 — natural size and enlarged 4 times], which is about J-inch long, bluntly pointed at the apex, and almost twice as long as broad, widest just above the middle; embryo club-shaped, small, curved and lying along one angle of the seed in a groove in the large central mealy mass. Time of Flowering : From June throughout the summer, the seeds ri- pening irregulirly from about the beginning of July. Propagattan : By seed. Occurre-Ace : General. Most injurious in the Prairie Provinces. Injury : Twining around the stems of the small grains, binding them together, pulling them down and choking them out, also a great nuisance in potato fields. The seeds begin to ripen long before all grain crops, and in that way land devoted to grain crops for several years becomes badly infested ; the seeds are one of the most abundant impurities in grain sent to the mar- ket, particularly in wheat and oats. The seeds have considerable value as feed for stock, for which reason screenings containing these and other weed seeds are often carried back from the elevators by farmers and fed without grinding or scalding, which is a dangerous practice. Remedy : Harrow or cultivate stubbles directly after harvest, so as to cover up and encourage the germination of as many seeds as possible in autumn. The young plants will be killed by frost. Those seedlings which germinate in spring must be destroyed by cultivating before seeding or by harrowing after the grain is up. Ploughing for summer-fallow must be done early, so as to turn down plants on stubble before the seeds ripen. 8.3 PLATE 44. CURLED DOCK. Rumex crispus. L. Other English names : Yellow Dock, Sour Dock. (Noxious: Dom.) Introduced. Perennial, vrith a very deep tap-root. Stem 2 to 3 feet, smooth, erect, terminating in wand-like racemes. Eoot-leaves oblong-lance- olate in outline with much crested or waved margins, 6 to 12 inches long, on long petioles ; stem-leaves on short petioles and much smaller or absent towards the top of the stems. Flowers small, in rather widely separated clusters around the stems. The 3 inner segments of the calyx enlarging as the seed ripens, heart-shaped, with the margin entire or obscurely toothed, all with grain-like tubercles on the outside. Seed (achene) [Plate 56. fig. 76 natural size and enlarged 4 times], yV of an inch long, shaped like a miniature beech-nut, dark brown, shining. Time of Flowering : June; seeds ripe July. Propagation : By seeds. Clumps increasing slowly by shoots from the crowns of old plants. Occurrence : In fields and waste places. Naturalized from Atlantic to Pacific, very abundant in Southern and Western Ontario. Injury : A common weed in meadows and pastures, and also abundant by roadsides, whence the seeds blow on to cultivated land. The seeds are a common impurity in grass and clover seeds. Remedy : Land worked under a short rotation is never badly infested by docks. In clover meadows all plants seen should be spudded out. This is easily done when the land is soft after rain. 84 Plate 44 I CURLE-D DOCK (Rumex cris p (j s, /.. i Plate 45 SHEEP SORREL IRumex acel-ose I la , /. ) PLATE 45. SHEEP SORREL. Rumex Acelcsella, L. Other English names: Sour-grass, Field Sorrel, Red Sone^ Introduced. Perennial, verj- persistent by extensively spreading yel- low fleshy rootstoeks. Stems slender, 6 to 18 inches, erect or ascendinp,i branched above. Leaves with silvery 2-piirted stipules at the base, narrow- ly arrow-head-shaped, entire, 1 to 4 inches long, quite smooth and rather fleshy, on long petioles. Flowers uunierous iu panifled racemes, of two kinds on separate plants : the male or anther-beariiig flowers have conspicu- ous anthers; the female or pistillate flowers are much less showy and are tip- ped with three tiny crimson feathery stigmas. Seeds (achenes) [Plate 54, fig. 38 — natural size and enlarged 8 times], as they occur among clover and grass seeds, generally covered by the three larger conspicuously veined calyx segments, which fit closely over the seed. The three small segments whicli alternate with these, fit over the angles of the achene outside the edges of the larger segments. The achene itself when the calyx segments are removed is oV of an inch long and nearly as broad, triangular-ovate, pale brown, shining. Time of Flowering : May to August ; seeds ripe July to September. tropagation : By seeds and shallow running rootstoeks. Occurrence : Ifaturalized in all parts of the country. Injury: The seeds are one of the most abundant impurities in clover and grass seeds. The plants increase rapidly in thin or worn-out meadows and in pastures, both on uplands and in hay marshes — crowding out the grass and much reducing the crop. Sheep Sorrel is also a troublesome weed in gardens. Remedy. In upland pastures a top-dressing of lime is said 1o be very beneficial. "Where land can be ploushed the sod should be m inured and ploughed down and the land re-seeded. In gardens, constant shallow cul- tivation is necessary. 85 THE GRASS FAMILY, GRAMINE^. There are among the true Grasses not only most valuable fodder plants, besides all of the cereal grains, but also several bad weeds, the occurrence of which in fields is directly due to the sowing of their seeds mixed with grain or other crop seeds. Among the most injurious annual grasses are Wild Oats and the Poison Darnel [Plate 51]. Chess, Bromus secalinus, L., is a biennial and is often abundant in fields of fall wheat, particularly where there is a thin stand of the grain plants. Of perennial grasses which are troublesome, the worst are : the notorious Couch or Quack Grass [Plate 46] of the East; and the Sweet Grass [Plate 49], Skunk-tail Grass [Plate 47] and 8pear Grass, Stipa spartea, Trin., of the West. Chess, Bromus secalinus, L., is an introduced biennial which is hardier than wheat, and where young plants of fall wheat have been killed out by the winter. Chess plants growing among the wheat from seeds sown with the grain, are seldom injured, but flourish to such an extent that some farmers have been led to the erroneous conclusion that Chess has originated from wheat plantlets which have been injured in various ways. It has, however, been proved conclusively that Chess is an entirely distinct grass which can grow only from its own kind of seeds ; moreover, these seeds [Plate 56, fig. 78 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] always have upon them a husk with a row of bristles down each side of the groove, by which as well as by their shape they may be easily distinguished from those of wheat. All doubters are recommended to dig up some plants of Chess as soon as they are recognizable in their fields, when they will find that the seeds from which the Chess plants began to grow the previous autumn, are still attached to the roots and that these are very different from grains of wheat. , 86 Plate46 -^/M"7^^ COUCH, QUACK or SCUTCH GRASS lAg ropy rum re pens./, ) PLATE 46. COUCH OR QUACK GRASS, Agropyjum repem (L.) Beauv- Other English names : Scutch, Twitch, Quitch. Other Latin name : iriticum repens, L. Introduced and native. Perennial by very wide-spreading but shallow fleshy rootstocks, forming large, matted beds. Flowering stems rather free- ly produced, smooth above, downy on the leaf sheaths below. Flowers in 3 to T-Howered spikelets, forming a narrow spike with the spikelets lying flatly against the central stalk. Leaves grayish green, rather distinctly ribbed, and more or less hairy. Seed in the husk [Plate 56, fig. 79 — natural size and enlarged 4 times] about f of an inch long, slender, 5 to T-nerved, usually with an awn | inch long at the tip ; the seed itself is shaped like a small grain of wheat i',, of an inch long with wide open crease, the basal germ end pointed, and at the top a blunt fuzzy tip. Time of Flowering: About the end of June; seeds ripe July. Propagation : By seeds and extensively creeping rootstocks near the surface of the ground. When broken by plough or cultivator, every piece of the rootstock is capable of forming a new plant ; such pieces may be car- ried from field to field on farm implements. Occurrence : In all kinds of soil. The eastern form with bright green leaves, which is probably the European plant, that has been introduced, is abundant east of the Prairie Provinces, and also in a few localities in Mani- toba and the Xorth-west. The native form with very grayish green foliage, named Agropyrum glaucum, E. & S., rar. occidentale, V. & S., is a far less aggressive weed, even where both forms are growing close together. Injury : A most persistent weed in all deep-ploughed land, and in all crops, with great power of spreading and choking out other plants. The .seeds are a very common impurity among seeds of the coarser grasses and in oats. Remedy : Shallow ploughing in hot weather is essential in clearing land of this well known weed. Thorough harrowing after ploughing will drag out many of the fleshy rootstocks, which will soon dry up in the sun and can be burnt. Rape sown after the land has been harrowed two or three times and well cultivated, is one of the best cleaning crops for late sowing; the sp^d should be sown 4 pounds to the acre in drills 26 inches apart, and the field kept clean with horse hoe, and afterwards with more or less hand hoeing if re- quired. The land may be put under another hoed crop, com, potatoes or other roots the following year. It is recommended by some who have had experience in fighting Quack Grass, that in badly infested fields, the land be ploughed shallow late in the autumn and well cultivated to expose the rootstocks to the action of the frost, in the spring, re-plough shallow, and keep the ground stirred frequently enough to prevent new growth till midsummer, then sow a smothering crop, such as buckwheat or millet, which will choke out the weakened plants. It may be necessary sometimes to follow the above treatment with a hoed crop. 87 PLATE 47. SKUNK-TAIL GRASS, Hordeum jubatum, L. Other English names : Skiink Grass, Squirrel-tail Grass. Wild Barley, Tickle Grass, and, inaccurately, "Fox-tail." Native. Perennial, not flowering the first year, forming tufts 8 to 12 inches high. Leaves grayish green. Flowers in beautiful silky bristly heads 3 to 4 inches long, pale yellowish green, often tinged with red. When ripe the spikes break up into 7-awned clusters of three flowers, the central one of which is long-awned and fertile ; this produces a slender sharp-pointed seed; on each side,of this and attached to it at the base are two abortive florets, each with three shorter awns than the central one; both the sharp seed and the awns are barbed upwards. Time of Flowering : July ; seeds ripe July to August. Propagation : By seeds. This grass is frequently stated in works in which it is mentioned, to be an annual or a biennial ; but all of the plants which I have grown for many years at Ottawa from western seed during the past twenty years, are certainly perennial, forming large tufts, but sending out no running rootstocks. Occurrence : From Lake Superior westward, particularly in alkaline soil, where other better grasses cannot thrive. Injury : This native grass is a very serious enemy of western stockmen, and is a source of much injury to horses, cattle and sheep. The barbed seeds and awns, when taken into the mouth, penetrate the soft tissues, caus- ing annoying irritation and inflamed ulcers, which make the animals bite their tongues and lips so that these are frequently badly lacerated. They also work down beside the teeth, causing great inflammation and eventually swellings which have sometimes been taken for the disease known as Lumpy Jaw or Big Jaw (actinomycosis). The awns are also said by Prof. Aven Nel- son (Wyoming Exp. Station, Bull, 19, 1894), to "work into the wool about the eyes of sheep, and then into the tissues surrounding the eye, and even into the ball itself, and in many instances causing total blindness." He also cites one case where this injury happened to the whole of a bunch of calves. Remedy: Mr. T. N. Willing, of Regina, Sask., who has carefully stud- ied the weeds of the Xorth-west, sums up the best methods of dealing with Skunk-tail Grass as follows in his Bulletin No. 16, "Hints for the Grain Grower," 1905 : "There is no difficulty in eradicating this grass from any land which can be ploughed, as the usual method of breaking in June will destroy it. It gives mos: trouble in waste places where it ripens its seed, which is spread abroad in every direction by wind and water. It grows freely about the edges of hay sloughs on the prairie, and is generally ripe before any hay is cut. The remedy in this case would be cutting before the seeds were formed. In a wet season, probably a second cutting would be necessary to prevent any seed ripening. If this course were continued for a few seasons, the pest would die a natural death, but it is the usual practice not only to cut too late, but also to avoid cutting the borders of sloughs in dry seasons when the grass is thin. Such methods favour the spread of this 88 Plate 47 V SKUNK GRASS. WILD BARLEY OR 5Q UIRREL-TAIL GRAoS (Hordeum jubahum.^ ) objectionable grass. When fields of Awnless Biome Grass are badly infested, it is best to break and backset them, and then take a crop of grain before re-seeding, or the field may be burned over in the fall to destroy such seed of the Wild Barley as may have fallen, and early in the following spring plough the sod shallow, and then harrow and roll. In this way the Brome Crrass may be renewed without re-seeding, and mo.st of {he weed will have been destroyed. "Excessive irrigation is said to favour the growth and spread of this weed. Ditches and roads should be kept free of it." In addition to the above good advice, it may be mentioned that when haj' is found to be badly mixed with Skunk-tail Grass having ripe or hard seeds, owing to the light feathery nature of the dry heads, the greater part of them may be removed by tossing the hay lightly with a pitchfork on a windy day. The heads can easily be disposed of afterwards by raking to- gether and putting a lighted match to the pile. Skunk-tail Grass is a true Barley, and when young makes excellent feed both green and as haj'. Short- AWNED Skunk-tail Grass. Growing with the ordinary long- awned and pale-coloured form is an easily detected variety with much shorter awns to the seeds, taller and more erect stems, and the spikes which are -slenderer and more drooping much more tinged with red. The habits of the two grasses are identical, and although generally growing together and equally common, one form as a rule preponderates in a locality. 89 PLATE 48. WILD OATS, Avena fatua, L., var. glabraia, Petermann. Other Latin names: Avena fatua, L., var. glabresceus. Cosson, and Avena strigosa, Schreb., of Canadian writers. (Noxious: Dom., Ont.. Man., N.W.) Introduced. Annual, smooth, 2 to 4 feet high, growing in erect tufts. Plant closely resembling in general appearance some varieties of cultivated oats. Panicle loose and open, spreading in all directions, 6 to 12 inches long. The empty glumes or outer pair of scales, which enclose the 2 to 3-flowered spikelets, green, herbaceous and tliin, as in the cultivated oats, both of about the same length. The flowering glumes or husks of the seeds [Plate 56, fig. 80 — natural size and enlarged twice] hard and horny, bearing many short stiff bristles particularly about the base, rounded on the back, tapering to a slender papery divided tip, 7-nerved, the nerves roughened with minute teeth, and the central one running out from the middle of the husk into a stiff twisted bristle-like awn, nearly an inch long, which in the ripe seeds is bent at a right angle a little below the middle. The 2 or 3 florets or oats in a spikelet vary much in size and colour, the lowest one being much larger than the upper ones. There are two varieties of the Wild Oat found as grain-field weeds in Canada. The type of the species, Avena fatua, L., which has rather larger, darker brown and much more bristly oats, is found in the eastern provinces; and the variety glahrata, with smaller, smoother, gray or olive-brown oats, with comparatively heavier kernels, is the prevailing form in the West. The identification of the variety glahrata was kindly made for me by Prof. C. V. Piper, of Washington, D.C. The White Wild Oats sometimes found are merely albinoes of these two varieties and do not always come true from seed. Carefully selected white oats under cultivation produced many dark- seeded plants and dark seeds gave several white oats. Both the eastern and western Wild Oais may nearly always be distinguished from cultivated oat.s by their earliness and the marked irregularity of ripening their seeds, the top oats frequently being ripe and shelling out long before the florets at the bottom of the panicle are ripe. W^ild Oats contain smaller kernels, have al- ways awns and some bristles at the base. The slanting horse-shoe shaped scar at the base of the seed is densely bristly, although these bristles are easily broken off, as also, with less frequency, is the scar itself, sometimes making the certain identification of some seeds difficult when found among threshed grain. The plate given herewith of the variety glahrata was drawn by Mr. Criddle from a plant found in Manitoba. When the paricles first appear from the sheaths, they are much more contracted in form. Wild Oats may be found in flower by the end of June, and some seeds are ripe by the middle of July. Propagation : By seeds only. Plants cut off when in flower throw up secondary flowering stems very quickly. Occurrence: In all parts of the country, the seeds beinor widely dis- tributed with all kinds of cereal grains and also carried from farm to farm in imperfectly cleaned threshing machines. 90 Plate 43 WILD OATS lAvena Fal-ua./."'/ glabrara./'.'«//'/7«". Injury : Wild Oat plants are hardier and able to withstand injurj much better than the cultivated varieties of oats. The seeds, unlike thos-i of the latter, can remain in the soil in a vital condition not only over our severest winters, but for several years. On account of their irregular and early ripening, many seeds ripen and shell out before the grain crops in which they are growing are ready to cut. Thus the land becomes infested with the seeds, which continue to appear in succeeding crops for many years. Remedy: Sow clean seed grain. "Wild Oats, if in ilie land, must be grown out of it by adopting some method by which the seeds are made to germinate and the young plants are destroj-ed before they have ripened their seeds. In the East, a short rotation, with seeding down for hay and pasture at regular intervals, should be adopted. In the West, where grain is grown almost to the exclusion of all other crops, the land should be cultivated di- rectly after harvest to cover up seeds on the surface. Many of these will germinate in autumn and will be killed by the winter cold. Early the next spring more seeds will germinate ; these must be cultivated down as soon as there is a good growth ; plough about 1st June and sow early oats or barley to be cut for green feed as soon as the heads appear. The land may then be ploughed and cultivated twice or as often as necessary to kill the weeds before winter, or a second cutting of green feed may be taken off before ploughing down the stubble. Instead of growing a green feed crop, some farmers sow early barley and leave for seed ; but care must be taken that no Wild Oats ripen. If plenty of cattle are available, the Wild Oats may be kept fed off as they come up on stubble land, and seeding down will help very much to keep them in check. 91 PLATE 49. SWEET GRASS, Hiemchloa borealis. R. & S. Other English names : Indian Hay, Vanilla Grass, Seneca Grass, Holy Grass. Other Latin names : Holcus odoratus, L. ; Hierochloe borealis, Roem. and Schultes; Saiastaiia odorata (L.) Seribn. Xative. Perennial, deep-rooted, with wide-spreading white rootstocks which produce in summer many barren shoots with long flat shining leaves over a foot in length, of a deep green. Flowering stems thrown up very early in spring, the first iiowers opening when the stems are only a few inches out of the ground. Panicle pyramidal, 1 to 2 inches high, loose dur- ing flowering, with spreading branches, contracting as the seeds ripen, when the stems are 12 to 18 inches high ; the sheath with its short blade below the middle. Spikelets drooping, with shining papery outer glumes which are yellowish, tinged with purple, 1-seeded but 3-flowered, two male flowers with 3 stamens between downy ciliate-margined scales, and one fertile flower inside 2 smooth scales with 2 anthers and a double plumose pistil. When the seeds are ripe, the whole panicle becomes dark golden brown. Seeds [Plate 54, fig. 39 — natural size and enlarged 8 times] enclosed in the inner scales, small, -^ of an inch, oblong. AVhole plant sweetly aro- matic, with the fragrant principle of the Tonka bean and Sweet C'iover (Coumarin). Time of Flowering : April to May. Fruit ripe by the beginning of June. I'ropagation : By seeds and running rootstocks. Occurrence : Rare in the eastern provinces and cfrowing m damp places by streams and rivers. In the West, in all kinds of soil, extremely abundant and very difficult to eradicate. Injury : This early ripening and deep-rooted grass is very persistent in the rich lands of the West, where it smothers otit all kinds of crops. Remedy : Mow and bum before summer-fallowing so as to avoid ploughing down ripe seeds. Ploughing for summer-fallows must be deep. Good results have been secured in Manitoba by ploughing in spring when the Sweet Grass is in flower and then seeding down heavily at once. This grass is often incorrectly spoken of in the West as "Quack" or "Couch Grass," quite a different grass, which flowers at the end of -June, roots near the surface of the soil, and can be killed by shallow ploughing followed by frequent cultivation. Sweet Grass flowers in April, and shallow ploughing merely stimulates its growth. 92 Plate49 SWEET GRASS (Hierochloa borealis , ^*.« ) Plate 50 GRE-EN FOXTAIL iSeraria vind is . /av^hc i PLATE 50. GREEN FOXTAIL. Setaria viridis, Beauv. Other English name : Pigeon Grass. Other Latin names : Chwtochloa viridis (L) Scribn. ; Ixophorus viridis (L) Nash ; Chamceraphis viridis. Porter. Introduced. AnnuaL Stems several, erect, simple or branched from below, 1 to 2 feet high, leafy. Panicle condensed into a cylindrical com- pound spike. Spikelets single-flowered, or with a perfect flower and a neutral flower beside it, inside 3 empty glumes or scales, awnless, but with a cluster of -3 to 6 persistent green bristles below the florets on the slinrt peduncle. The tough hard husk of the seed is about jV of an inch long, oval, with the glume or outer scale rounded and folded over the highly, polished rounded edges of the pale or inner scale, which is flattened in Ihe middle. Both scales of the husk are roughened crosswise with narrow ridges. The colour is very variable, according to the degree of ripeness — yellow, gray, brown or purplish, the darker seeds mottled with darker spots. The seed itself is greenish white, convex on the outer germ-bearing face aiid flattened on the inner face. [Plate 54, fig. 40 — natural size and enlarged 8 times.] Time of Flowering : June to September; seeds ripe by July. Propagation : By seeds. Occurrence : Abundant in Eastern Canada ; as vet only occasional in the West. Injury : The seeds are one of the commonest impurities in clover and grass seeds. Remedy : A common and abundant weed in all crops on land not worked under a short rotation. Easily killed when young by smothering with earth in the cultivation of hoed crops. Late plants in hoed crops, after cultiva- tion stops, should be pulled by hand. Yellow Foxtail, Setaria glnuca, Beauv. Another grass of the same family and very similar to the above is the Yellow Foxtail. The branches, however, are more decumbent and spreading, the whole plant rather larger and more succulent, the spikes less compound and slenderer, with larger seeds ^ inch, and the bristles are distinctly yellow. The seeds are almost equally common with those of the Green Foxtail in commercial seeds. 93 PLATE 51. COMMON DARNEL, Lolium temuknlum, L. Other English names : Poison Darnel, White Darnel, Ivray, Poison Uye-grass, Bearded Darnel. Other Latin names: Lolium arvense, With.; Lolium temulentum, L., var. a genuinum, Sm. ; Lolium temulentum, L., var. h arvense, Sm. Introduced. Annual, smooth. Stems 2 to 4 feet his,'!), wmple. leafy. Flowers in a spike 6 to 10 inches long; somewhat resembling that of Couch Grass, but having the edges of the spikelets, instead of the broadsides as in Couch, resting against the stalk; spikelets 3 to 7-flowered, solitary, sessile and alternate, with their edges fitting tightly into grooves on either side of the stalk; each spikelet in the axil of a long rigid strongly nerved, persistent glume or empty scale, which merely equals or is much longer than the spike- lets. Leaves 6 to 10 inches long by \ inch wide, rough above. Seeds swol- len, nearly straight on the outer face, much swollen on the inner, with a deen wide groove, the inner scale of the husk with a wing-like keel on each side, minutely bristly on the edges, but not coarsely bristly ciliate as in Chess, Bromus seealinus; outer scale hard and flinty as in the chaff of wheat, and either with a long awn in the variety genuinum, which is the more widely dis- tributed form of this weed in Canada, or entirely without awn in the variety arvense, which has recently appeared in great abundance at certain points in the Eed Eiver Talley in Manitoba, where the seed was spoken of as "False Barley" when first detected. The true seed after the husks have been removed is greenish brown often tinged with deep purple. Time of Flowering : July ; seeds ripe August. Propagation : 'By seed. Occurrence: Occasional, generally in wet land; abundant recently in parts of the Red River valley, Manitoba. Injury : The husks cover the seed very tightly, the inner scale being adherent to it; in that condition the seeds are very much of the same size as small grains of wheat ; they are therefore very difficult to separate from that grain. The seeds of Darnel are widely reputed to be poisonous : but there seems to be some doubt upon the subject. In "The True Grasses," by Eduard Hackel, as translated by Prof. F. L. Scribner and Effie A. Southworth, IS the following: "A weed among grain crops; troublesome in wet years. The grain contains a narcotic principle (Loliin) soluble in ether, which causes eruptions, trembling and confusion of sight in man and flesh-eatin? animals, and very strongly in rabbits ; but it does not affect swine, homed cattle or ducks." Prof. E. M. Freeman, of the University of Minnesota, has made some important investigations into the question of the origin of darnel poisoninc, and in commenting on the discovery by P. Guerin, of Paris, France, of a fungus in the seeds of Darnel, to which he attributed the poisonous effects, says as follows under date April 3rd, 1906: "In California Darnel is ex- ceedingly abundant, and is known as Chess or Cheat. It sometimes 94 Plate 51 COMMON DARNEL (Lolium temulentum /..) in wet situations or poorly drained regions, constitutes a very considerable portion of the grain." "From the literature, which I have examined some- what extensively, I learn that the concensus of opinion in Europe is that the plant is poisonous. I have shown, however, [Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. Lond. Sec. B. Vol. 196, pp. 1-27, 1903.] that there are two races of the plant, one with a fungus, and the other without a fungus, and there is ap- parently no transference of the fungus from one race to the other. If the seeds are really poisonous, it may be that those with the fungus are poison- ous, while those without fungus are not. I have attempted recently to de- termine this, but have failed to get any conclusive results." "It is well known that some Europeans doubt the toxic action of these grains, and it is worthy of note that Lolium temulentum very commonly car- ries ergots. Kobert and other European investigators ascribe the toxic effects chiefly to the presence of ergot. I have personally attempted also to obtain evidence of toxicity by feeding the seeds with the fungus and without the fungus to rabbits, mice and guinea pigs, with absolutely no effect. As far then as my own experience is concerned, I have been unable to prove the toxicity of the Darnel ; but I must admit that these experiments have not been at all extensive and are undoubtedly insufficient to serve as a basis for far- reaching conclusions. I have recently obtained information from Califor- nia, which tends to show, however, that the plant in that region is not at all feared. In fact, I have letters from men interested in the milling of wheat in California who inform me that the grain is sometimes intention- ally mixed with barley for feed, and I can get absolutely no record of any toxic action of the plant from California. As I have stated above. Darnel is exceedingly commcn in that State." The above gives, I believe, a summary of this subject up to the present time. Remedy: Sow clean seed. Should Darnel increase very much, doubtless some improvement will be made in fanning mills by means of which the seed will be separated from the grain, as has recently been done in the case of Wild Oats. 9.3 PLATE 52. ERGOT ON COUCH. RYE AND TIMOTHY. Claciceps purpurea (Fr.) Tul., and other species. (Noxious: Dom.) There are often found in certain seasons among the grains of rye, rarely among those of wheat, and abundantly among the seeds of some grasses, dark-coloured solid bodies of characteristic form in each species of grain or seed. These are of a doughy consistency, and when broken are purplish white inside. They are the storage organs or resting stage of a parasitic fungus or perhaps the several species of fungi belonging to the genus Claviceps. Each of these solid bodies is called a sclerotium (plural scIcTotia) derived from a Greek word skleeros, hard or dry, in allusion to the nature of these bodies. They are practically masses of the vegetative system or "spawn" 'if the fungus in a resting condition, but capable of growth in spring when placed under favourable conditions of warmth and moisture, such as they get when sown with crop seed or when lying on the ground at the bases of the stems on which they were formed the previous summer. At the proper time in spring very small toadstool-like bodies on violet stalks with round orange- coloured heads about the size of mustard seeds, are produced from the sclero- tia lying on the ground, which develop enormous numbers of microscopically small spores (organs analogous to the seeds of higher plants). These are pro- duced at the time that grasses and grains are in flower. The minute spores, carried by currents of air or by insects, lodge in the flowers of the grasses and begin to grow; in a short time they completely destroy the seed and form from them the sclerotia. These vary in shape according to the plant they attack. In rye and Couch Grass they are long and horn-like, over 1 inch in length, frequently much larger than shown in our figure of Couch Grass. In wheat and Wild Rice they are shorter and thicker ; in timothy and June Grass very small, \ of an inch long, slender and almost black. During the summer, summer spores are formed on these horns, and also at the same time a sugary secretion very attractive to insects which, coming to the infested plants, carry ofi on their bodies many of the summer spores to the flowering heads of other grasses they visit, and in that way spread the infection. Late in summer the production of summer spores stops, and the sclerotia or st'or- age organs begin to store up a special kind of starch found only in fungi and known as fungus starch, as well as oils to serve as food for the growth of the fruiting organs to be sent oul the following spring ; they then harden up, turn dark purple in colour and fall to the ground or are carried with the grain or hay. The sclerotia are common on a great many grasses and particularly on rye, wheat, barley and Wild Rice, as well as on Western Couch Grass and other prairie grasses cut for hay. They all contain an alkaloid and other violent poisons. Some are used in medicine under the name of "Ergot of Rye." Bread made from flour containing ergot may cause a serious disease known as ergotism in those that eat it ; and animals which feed on grain or hay containing ergot, may also be severely poisoned, as is sometimes the case on our western plains. One well-known result of cattle eating ergotised hay is abortion. 96 Plate 52 COUCH OR QOACK GRASS, RYE and TIMOTHY Attacked by Ergot Hay containing much ergot should not be fed. In years of scarcity when such hay must be used, it should be well threshed before feeding, to dis- lodge the poisonous sclerotia. Grain containing ergot should be thoroughly screened before use and the sclerotia destroyed. Seed grain from an eigot- ised crop should not be used if any other grain can be procured, and all grain should be treated with formalin or bluestone before sowing as a precau- tion against ergot and smut. Many writers have treated of Ergot, as Berkeley, Cooke, Worthington Smith, Kerner & Oliver, Bessey. Halsted and many others. One of the best and most recent articles of a popular but scientific nature is by Prof. E. M. Freeman in his excellent "Minnesota Plant Diseases" (1905). Ergot and Er- gotism are also treated of in all the leading encyclopaedias. (7) 97 Plate 53 • 9 II,,.,,.,,., %% ,//ifi^i/i,fi/y/'j-/tftf'a^ <^% :/%„A^ W.r,/ e.i ^A/tf f^fH^ -/ '^/////Av//a; . tf//j/t/r*/ Jf^'/t/ . lO/^i/y// f ft •• //„. 'fiu .///^,/C/. . /.,.../..... • • ^iP^« '/'/,: /■„W.../l • f 'SraJ-i-'t^"i"''/ '. ////c^M'ffr/ //f>/i,t«-^//^ A'^rAy/'fff/ V >. ^ ^ ey>/w/*y -//y' If '/..Aj- y^r^,.,,y t //ZZ 'A,.// .^/f'Jf//^ II /T// //// 't-zW #• /'/,',. /■„,.,/ i^ ff/i/O' r f^n/ft^-A.ff'm^Mi*' .y7tf*i'//vv'/ Plate 54 %>> "/y^ t r /'//I /// o/f ^^f/f^/ft i^/fi^ c%'(^wv.^/?» :^/^///^ .-T^ft/rf/ ft i^/»/^i ////>// . ^///'^f/A //(•' •> !*"• M^fT/'// .l^^ttM/^t y,'^/ r/„„/„/ as 'ra^hi^ if A^ C6 -/fi/^'i-Zn// //>'' -//'rf^Z/rr r %.% ft '^/A./' QeMfr # y^i^'^A %>/■/'/'/■ _^/////0 ' f//fr//'^/tj . ///'^'jy/ -Vyy/^^ vO^'/'"" ''""'^^ 1^ • y^^^'-'/^fi^, jr^///et f/e^ % ./ft'fj/i .T^'j//rj/ Plate 55 *i t T^ •':» 1. ^^i^^' #-^ '//:./■ . ■7^// ^:,//,,,;,/ ■Jo^/ptl- .^HI/yMV V,',,-^^., „, //t/j/ittt/ M .l^u/^fi' JA^/.r •, • ^'i J^«^ .Wt/^/^rt/ t..t [yi/^^y ,i^M//j^f' 'p/il/' rr/r/i/i #. o ^.,.// -r^./z ,, ^ V ?>>■/■//>/' ^//Jf fr///'- /'/i •v/'- f'///*^ f l-f t;f /am •i'/'i(i/-//'<''''/ '^ ^.f.i ,tt/ffj //^//^///'^'/■'^/ .:f/r^^ -:^^M//'/>^^/ ./f /-if /i/»/r// ./////////'^// M . iff^e/^ nuff/ ■'/r/^i'/i I /f ///M .m/i^m/f/' Plate 56 f \f ■v/'/f/i^/- ^/u^f^^ .// r'///////A'/ ."//t/.}^ \ \ ■:^^// ^^fu/^-y^y,. !'l '/ ':ir ) ^'fti/wfi ^M'^/i/ee INDEX. PLATE PAGE Achillea MilUJolium o4 Aconitum 17 Agropyrum gluucum, rar. occi- dentale 87 repens 46 87 igrostemma Githago 36 Alsine media 37 AUARANIACE^ 80 Amaranth, Spreading 81 Amarantus albvs 80 blitoides 81 retrofiexus 42 80 Ambrosia art emisice folia 24 52 psilostachya 52 trifida 23 51 Ambrosiace^ 4a Anemone, Crocus 17 Pennsylvanian 17 White 17 Anemone canadensis 17 patens, var. yuttalliana 17 Annuak 8 Anogra pallida, var. lepiophylla 19 44 Antennaria 48 Anthemis Cotula 25 53 Apargia autumnalis 62 Arctium Lappa 56 Lappa, var. miwus 27 56 minus 56 Artemisia 48 biennis 48 frigtda 48 Lvdoviciann 48 Artichoke. Wild 48 .■Vster tribe 47 Asters 47 August Flower 62 .4^6710 fatxta 90 fatua, var. glabraia 48 90 fatua, var. glabrescens 90 strigosa 90 Axyris amarantoides 41 79 Bardane 56 Barley, Wild 88 Bartsia, Red 73 Bartsia Odontites "3 Baughlan 57 Bean, Golden 41 Beaver Poison 46 Biennials 9 Bindweed, Black 83 Field 37 72 Great 71 Hedge 71 Upright 71 Bitter-weed 51 Black-eved Susan 55 Blue Devil 68 Blue-thistle 68 Blueweed 35 68 Borage Family 67 b0rraginace.e 67 Botanical terms explained 14 PLATE PAGE Brassica campestris 24 ju/iteu 24 nigra 24 orientalis !^0 perfoliaiu 20 Sinapistrum 5 23 Bromus secalinus 86 Buckhoru 76 Buckwheat, Wild , 43 83 Buckwheat Family 82 Bugles-, Viper's 68 Bur, Blue 36 70 Common 67 Sheep 70 Burdock, Common 56 Lesser 27 66 Bursa pastoris 27 Buttercup, Tall 17 BiTTEBcip Family 17 Cabbage. Hare's-ear 20 Cadluck 23 "Cadluck" 24 Camelina m,acrocarpa 25 microcarpa 25 safiva 6 25 Campion, Bladder 16 39 White 35 Caper Family 18 Capparidace.1: 18 Cnpselln Btirsa-pastoris 8 27 Caraway 45 Carduiis arrensis 59 Carrot, Wild 45 Carxim Carui 45 Cartophtllace.* 32 Catnep 74 Catclifly. Nieht-flowering 12 34 Ceniaurea nigra 48 Cernstivm arvense 38 vvlgntnm 37 Cho'tnehlnn riridis 93 Chamn-mvhi!) riridis 93 Chamomile. Dog's 53 Charlock 23 CHENOPODIACE.E 39 Chenopodium album ...". 40 78 hyhridvm 78 Chess 86 Chickweed 37 Common 15 37 Field 38 Mouse-ear 37 Chickweeds 32 Chioorv 30 61 Wild 61 Chicory Family 47 Chinaman's Greens 80 Chrysanthemum Leucanthemum. 26 55 Chrysocoma graminifolia 49 C1CHORIACE.3E 47 Cichorivm Intyhus 30 61 Cicuta Dnuglasii 46 maeulata 20 46 occidentalis 46 99 PLATE PAGB 'eagans -iti viiusa, var. nuiculata ItJ Cinqueioil, (jprighc -43 Virsiani aivense 29 Classincaiion of weeas B Chnueps 9t> purpurea 62 96 Clean seed 13 Cleome infegrifolta lb Clotbur ob Clover, Rabbit's-foot 42 CloTers, bweet 42 Cnicus arvtiisis it* 59 arcensis, var. setosus 60 lanceolaius 60 undulatus 60 Cockle, China 33 Corn 36 Cow 11 33 Purple 14 36 Stickv 34 White 13 36 Cockles 32 Composite 47 Cone-flower, Black-eyed 26 Conringia orientalis 2 20 CONVOLVULACiLE 71 Convolvulus sepium, var. ameri- canus 71 spithammus 71 Corydalis aurea 17 Couch Grass 46 87 "Couch Grass " 92 Cowbane 46 Spotted 20 46 Cow-bell 39 Cowherb 33 Cress, Cow 32 Crowfoot, Creeping 17 Cursed 17 Seaside 17 Crownweed ^ 51 Crucifer^ 17 Cucubalus Behrn 39 Cuscuta epithymum 71 racemosa, var. chiliana 71 irifolii 71 CUSCPTACE^ 71 Cynoglossum officinale 67 Daisy, Ox-eye 26 55 "Ox-eye" 55 ^Vhite 55 Yellow 55 Dandelion, Common 62 Fall 31 62 Red-seeded 62 Darnel, Bearded ^i Common 51 94 Poison 94 White 94 Delphinium 17 Dock, Curled 44 84 Sour 84 Yellow 84 Docks 82 Dodder, Alfalfa 71 Doddf-rs 71 Dog-fennel 53 Doorweed 82 100 PLATE PAOB Dracocephalum parvifiorum 74 Dragonhead 74 Echinospermum Lappula 36 70 Echium vulgare 35 68 Epilobium adenocauion 43 angustifolium 43 Ergot on Couch, Ry© and Timothy 52 96 Erigeron annuus 48 canadensis 48 strigosus 48 Erysimum cheiranihoiJes 1 19 orientale 20 Euphorbia Helioscopia 74 Euphrasia latijolia 73 Euthamia graminifolia 49 Evening-primrose, Common 43 White 19 44 Evening-primrose Family 43 Everlasting Flowers 48 Extermination of weeds 9 Eye-bright, Glandular ... 73 "False Barlev" 51 False-flax 6 25 Small-seeded 25 False-tansy 48 Fat-hen 78 FiGWORT Family 73 Fireweed, Great 43 Fireweeds 43 Fleabane, Daisy 48 Rough Daisy 48 Fleabanes 48 Fo>d:ail. Green 50 93 Yellow 93 "Fox-tail" 88 French Weed 28,30 Fruit, botanical meaning of 15 FfMARIACE.!: 17 Fumitory, Golden 17 Fumitory Family 17 Glycyrrhiza lepidota 42 Gnaphalium 48 Gold of Pleasure 25 Goldenrod, Bushy 49 Canada 49 Fragrant 49 Narrow-leaved 21 49 Smooth 49 Tall Hairy 49 Goose foot. Maple-leaved 78 MTiite 78 GoosEFooT Family 77 gramine.e 86 Grass Family 86 Grindelia squarrosa 47 Cromwell, Field 68 Groundsel, Common 58 Stinking 58 Gumweed 47 Hardback 43 Harrows and weeders 12 Hawkbit, Autumnal 62 Hawkweed, Branching 63 Mouse-ear 64 Orange 32 fi.S l-LAXE I'AOE Uelianthus doTonicoides 48 Maximiliani 4a riyidus 48 Hemloclc, Water 46 Oreguu 4(j Purple-fitemmeu 4t) Wyoming 4tt Hernck Z'6 Uieiacium aurantiucam ii'2 ti3 cludanthum iiii Filosella 64 Filosella, var. feleterianam. ... 64 prcealtum 64 Hierochloa borealis 49 92 KieTochloe borealis 92 Hogweed 52 Holcus odoratus 92 Holy Grass 92 Hordeum jubatuni 47 88 Horsev/eed 48 Hound's-tongue 67 Indian Hay 92 Iva axillaris 22 50 xanthiifolia 50 Ivray 94 Ixophorus viridis 93 Kale, Field 23 "Kale" 24 King Devil 64 Kingweed 51 Klinkweed 20 Knapweed 48 Knotweeds 82 Labiat.£ 73 Lactuca pulchella 33 65 Scariola 65 virosa 65 LadyVthumb 82 Lamb's-quarters 40 78 Lappa major 56 minor „ 56 officinalis 56 Lappula Lappula 70 Larkspur 17 Leguminos^ 41 Leoniodon autumnale 31 62 Lepidium apetalum 10 31 campesfre 32 intermedium 31 rirginicum 31 Lettuce, Blue 33 65 Large-flowered Blue 65 Prickly 65 Showy 65 Leucanthemum vulgare 55 Linaria vulgaris 73 Liquorice, Wild 42 Lithospermum arvense 68 Loco Weeds 41 Lolium arvense 94 temulentum 51 94 temnlentum, var. a genuinum ... 94 temvlentum, var. 6. arvense 94 Lychnis, Evening 35 Lychnis alba 13 35 dioica 35 Githago 14 36 101 l'L.\TK PAGE pratensis 35 cespertina 35 Marsh-elder, Small-flowered 50 J/u/ufu Cotula 53 Matricaria inodora 53 Mayweed 53 Scentless 53 Stinking 25 53 Medicago denticulata 42 maculata 42 Medick. Spotted 42 Toothed 42 Melandrium noctiflorunt 34 Melilotus alba 42 officinalis 42 Milfoil 54 Mint, Hairy 74 Mint Family 73 Monkshood 17 Morning-glory, Small-flowered 72 MORNING-GLORV FaMILY 71 Mulgedium acuminatum 65 pulchellum 65 Musquash Root 46 Mustard, Ball 7 26 Cut-leaved Tansy 21 Gray Tansy 21 Green Tansy 3 21 Hare's-ear 2 20 Indian 24 Ontario 23 Treacle 19 Tumbling 4 22 Wild 5 23 "Wild" 24 Wormseed 1 19 Mustard Family 17 Myngrum panieulatum '?7 sativum 26 Myosotis Lappula 70 Names of weeds 5, 7 yepeta Cataria 74 Xeslia paniculata 7 26 Noxious, weeds proclaimed as 16 Oats, Wild 48 90 (Enothera albicaulis 44 biennis 43 yuttallii 44 On'agrace^ 43 Oxytropis 41 Paint-brush 63 Devil's 63 Parsley Family 45 Parsnip, Poison 46 Water 46 Wild 45 Pea Family 41 Penny-cress 28 Peppergrass 10 31 Field 32 Perennials 9 Persicaries 82 Persicary. Dock-leaved 82 Glandular 82 Swamp 82 Pickpurse 40 PLATE FAliE Pigeon Grass 93 Pigeon AVeed tiS Pigweed, Redroot 42 80 Kough 80 Russian 41 79 Pigweed Family 80 Pink Family 32 Plantaginace^ 74 Plantago aristata JJ lanceolata 39 76 major 38 75 media --• 76 BugelUi 75 Plantain, Bird-seed '5 Bracted 77 Broad-leaf 75 Door-yard 75 English : •■ "6 Greater 75 Hoary 76 Pale 76 Polygonacej! 82 Polygonum 82 aviculare 82 Convolvulus 83 lapathifolium 82 Muhlenhergii 82 pennsylvanicum 82 Perxicaria 82 Portulaca, Wild 41 Portulnca oleracea 41 Potenfilln Anserina 43 monspeUensis 43 noTvegica 43 Porertv Weed 22 50 Purslane 18 41 Pusley 41 Oiiack Grass 46 87 "Quark" 92 Quitch 87 Rabbit-ear 20 Radish, Wild 24 Ragweed, Common 24 52 False 50 Great 23 51 Perennial 52 Smaller 52 Tall 51 Ragweed Family 48 Ragwort, Common 28 57 Tansy 57 RAVrNCFLACE^ 17 Banunrulus acHs 17 Cymhalaria 17 repens 17 sceleratus 17 Rape, Bird 24 German 24 Itaphanus Baphanistrum 24 Red-root 68 Ribgrass 39 76 Ribwort 76 Ribwort Family 74 Bosa (iriculaTis, var. Bourgeau- innn 42 arknnsana 42 pratincola 42 Rosacea 42 PLATE PAGE Rose, Prairie 42 Rose Family 42 Rotation of crops, short 11, 16 Budbeckia hirta 55 Bumex ; 82 Acetosella 45 85 crispus 44 84 Rye-grass, Poison 94 Sage brushes .48 Sage, Lesser Pasture 48 Pasture 48 Sweet 48 Sandweed 40 Saponaria Vucvaria 33 Savastana odorata 92 Scrophclariace^ 73 Scutch 87 Seed, clean 13 Seeding down 12 Seeds of weeds 13 Seneca Grass 92 Senecio Jacohcua 28 57 viscosns 58 vnlfiaris 58 Setaria glauca 93 viridis 50 93 Shepherd's-purse 8 27 Silene Cucuhahis 39 inflata 16 39 noctiflora 12 34 pratensis 35 vulgaris 34 Silverweed 43 Sinapls nrvenxis 23 Sisymbrium, Tall 22 Sisymbrium nltissimum 4 22 incisum, var. Harticegianum .... 21 ineisum. var. filipes 3 21 pannonicvm 22 stnapisfrum 22 Skunk Grass 88 Skunk-tail Grass 88 Shnrt^awned 89 Smartweeds 82 Solidngn canadensis 49 lanceolata 21 49 rugosn 49 seroHna 49 Spnchvs arvensis 34 66 asper 67 oleraceus 67 pulcliellvs 65 Sophia inrisn 21 Sorrel. Field 85 Red 85 Sheep 45 85 Sour-grass 85 Sowthistle, Common 67 Corn 66 Creeping 66 Field 66 Perennial 34 66 Spiny 67 Spear Grass 86 Spergula arrensis 17 40 Spider-flower, Entire-leaved 18 Spinach Family 77 Spircea tomentosa 43 102 PLATK I'AOE Spraying for destruction of Wild Mustard 23 Spurge, Suu 74 Spurrey 17 40 Corn 40 Squirrel-tail Grass 88 St. James's-wort 57 Siacliys palustris 74 Staggerwort 57 SteUaria graminea 37 media 15 37 Stickseed 70 Stinking Willie 57 Stinkweed 9 28 Stipa spartea 86 Stitchwort, Grass-leaved 37 Lesser 37 Succory, Wild 61 Summer fallowing 11 Sunflower, Black-headed 48 Many-flowered Prairie 48 Sunflowers, Wild 48 SrNPLOwER Family 47 Sweet Grass 49 92 Tanacetum vulgare 58 Tansy, Common 58 Taraxacum, erythrospermum. 62 officinale 62 Tare. Wild 41 Thermopsis 41 Thistle. Bull 60 Canada 29 59 Creeping 59 Field 59 Prairie 60 Soft Field 59 Spear 59 Thistle. Western Bull 60 "Thistle. Russian" 77 PLATE PAGE Thlaspi arvense 9 28 Bursa-pastoris 27 Tickle Grass 88 Toad Flax 73 Trifolium arvense 42 Triticum repens 87 Tumble Weed 80 Twitch 87 UlIBELLIFERi 45 ]'accaria Vaccaria 11 33 vulgaris 33 Vanilla Grass 92 Verbena Family 73 Verbenace^ 73 Veronica 73 Vervain, Blue 73 Vetch, Purple Tufted 42 Vicia angustifolia 41 Cracca 42 Weed, what is a 6 Weeds, losses due to 6 names of 5, 7 how they spread 8 classification of 8 extermination of 9 not natural to soil 13 Weeders and harrows 12 Wheat-thief 68 White Bottle 39 Whit© Weed .55 Willow herbs 43 Wormwood, Roman 52 Wormwoods 48 Yarrow 54 Yellow-weed. (Narrow - leaved Yellow - weed ^Xarrow - Ipaved Goldenrod) 49 103 > o I. ft-.. t