Fetid Marigold (Dyssodia papposa (Vent.) Hitchc.)
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↑Range - Expand
Legend | Color |
Native | |
Expanded | |
Native or Not Present | |
Native or Expanded | |
Expanded or Not Present |
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 small, weedy plant is not generally planted, and is viewed as an undesireable weed due to its foul smell. It is abundant in its native range; it has spread far beyond its native range in part due to humans creating more of the open habitats; it spreads readily along roadways, and also colonizes abandoned fields. We mark the new range expanded because it is largely contiguous with the native range.
↑Links & External Resources
• Dyssodia papposa (fetid marigold) | USDA PLANTS Database (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa | Go Botany (About This Site)
• Dogweed | iNaturalist (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa | Biota of North America Project (BONAP) (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa | NatureServe Explorer (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa | Flora of North America (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa | Missouri Plants (About This Site)
• Fetid Marigold | Maryland Biodiversity Project (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa (Fetid Marigold) | Minnesota Wildflowers (About This Site)
• Dyssodia papposa (Ventenat) A.S. Hitchcock. (Dogweed, Fetid Marigold) | Digital Atlas of the Virginia Flora (About This Site)