Weed of the Month: Bitter Sneezeweed

This plant contains toxins that can cause digestive issues, appetite loss, and neurologic problems in horses.
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Weed of the Month: Bitter Sneezeweed
Bitter sneezeweed | Photo: Sandi Eisenmenger
Common name: Bitter sneezeweed
Scientific name: Helenium amarum (Raf.) H. Rock

Life Cycle: Warm season annual
Origin: United States
Poisonous: Yes

Bitter sneezeweed is distributed across much of the United States, from Texas north to Kansas and Missouri and eastward to the Atlantic coast. It grows frequently in pastures and can infest entire pastures in western portions of Kentucky. Overgrazing increases the abundance of bitter sneezeweed. Seed germination occurs in late spring or early summer. The plant’s leaves are narrow and threadlike and alternate along the stem. The flowers are bright yellow and bloom from late June through September under Kentucky growing conditions.

This species contains toxins that might cause digestive disturbance, appetite loss, and neurologic problems. Horses generally avoid eating bitter sneezeweed, and most problems occur in the late summer when the plant is flowering

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