Fetid Goosefoot (Dysphania incisa (Poir.) ined.)
Also classified as Dysphania graveolens (Willd.) Mosyakin & Clemants.
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↑Range - Expand
Legend | Color |
Native | |
Introduced | |
Native or Not Present | |
Introduced or Not Present | |
Native or Expanded |
This tentative map is based on our own research. It may have limited data on Canada and/or Mexico, and there is some subjectivity in our assignment of plants as introduced vs. expanded. Read more in this blog post.
Although this plant occurs somewhere in each of these regions, it may only occur in a small part of some or all of them.
This species is also native to Mexico, but we have yet to build this portion of its map. We mark the Colorado populations Expanded because they are adjacent to its native range and the plant has been spreading and forming robust populations there. But we mark the newer populations to the east as introductions because they are separated from the native range by large gaps in which this species does not occur. The reports in Louisiana (thought to be native) and Missouri (thought to be an introduction) may be of transient populations that may no longer exist.
↑Links & External Resources
• Dysphania graveolens (fetid goosefoot) | USDA PLANTS Database (About This Site)
• Dysphania graveolens | Go Botany (About This Site)
• Fetid Goosefoot | iNaturalist (About This Site)
• Dysphania graveolens | Biota of North America Project (BONAP) (About This Site)
• Dysphania graveolens | Flora of North America (About This Site)
• Dysphania incisa (Poir.) ined. | Plants of the World Online (POWO) (About This Site)