Musk thistle

Musk Thistle

Musk Thistle
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class:Magnoliopsida
Order:Asterales
Family:Asteraceae
Genus:Carduus
Species:C. nutans

Template:Taxobox section binomial botany

The Musk thistle (Carduus nutans) is a member of the daisy family (Asteraceae). It is an aggressive, biennial herb with showy red-purple flowers and painful spiny stems and leaves.

Mature plants range in height from 1½ to 6 feet tall and have multi-branched stems. Leaves are dark green, coarsely-lobed, with a smooth, waxy surface and a yellowish-to-white spine at the tip. The large disk-shaped flower heads, containing hundreds of tiny individual flowers, are 1½ to 3½ inches in length and occur at the tips of stems. Flower heads will droop to a 90-degree angle from the stem when mature, hence its alternate name of "Nodding thistle". Each plant may produce thousands of straw-colored seeds adorned with plume-like bristles.

A native of western Europe, Musk thistle was introduced into the eastern United States in the early 1800s and has a long history there as a rangeland pest. It was first discovered in Davidson County, Tennessee in 1942 and has been declared a noxious weed in many states, including North Carolina.

Musk thistle grows from sea level to an elevation of about 8,000 ft in neutral to acidic soils. It invades open natural areas such as meadows, prairies, and grassy balds. It spreads rapidly in areas subjected to frequent natural disturbance events such as landslides and flooding, but does not grow well in excessively wet, dry or shady conditions.

Musk thistle is usually a biennial, requiring 2 years to complete a reproductive cycle. However, it may germinate and flower in a single year in warmer climates. Seedlings emerge in mid to late July and develop into a rosette where plants can reach four feet in diameter. Plants overwinter in the rosette stage until they begin to bolt in mid-March.

During the bolting stage plants form multi-branched stems to a height of six feet. The number of seedheads per plant is site-dependent and ranges from about 24 to 56 on favorable sites and 1 to 18 on less favorable sites. Flowers emerge in early May to August and seed dissemination occurs approximately one month after the flowers form. A single flower head may produce 1,200 seeds and a single plant up to 120,000 seeds, all of which may be wind blown for miles. Seeds may remain viable in the soil for over ten years, making it a difficult plant to control.

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