Pastureland Plants
On this page, Amazing Grazing features a list of pastureland plants, including information about the positive and negative aspects of each. (Yes, weeds have positive qualities, too.) We will populate the page over time, beginning with some of the plants that are most challenging to and prevalent in pasturelands.
We’ll start with those generally considered detrimental to quality pasture and eventually cover beneficial plants as well. We hope to also offer suggestions for control, should the negatives outweigh the positives. There is an introduction to plants. We’d ask you to begin here. It may assist you in understanding some of the terminology used in our articles. We hope you find this information helpful!
Common name | Season/ persistence | Legume | Native | Forage use | Toxicity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bitter sneezeweed | Warm/ annual | X | none | X | |
Dock, broadleaf | Cool/ perennial | none | X | ||
Dock, curly | Cool/ perennial | none | X | ||
Dog fennel | Warm/ perennial | X | none | X | |
Golden rod | Warm/ perennial | X | none | 0 | |
Hemlock, poison | Biennial or perennial | none | X | ||
Hemp dogbane | Warm/ perennial | X | none | X | |
Henbit | Cool/ annual | none | 0 | ||
Horse nettle | Warm/ perennial | X | none | X | |
Jimsonweed | Warm/ annual | none | X | ||
Kudzu | Warm/perennial | X | low | 0 | |
Lambsquarters | Warm/ annual | none | X | ||
Mare's tail/ horseweed | Warm/ annual | X | none | 0 | |
Maypop/passion flower | Warm/ perennial | X | none | 0 | |
Milkweed | Warm/ perennial | X | none | X | |
Nimblewill | Warm/ perennial | X | none | 0 | |
Pennsylvania smartweed | Cool/ annual | X | none | 0 | |
Plantain, broadleaf | Cool/ perennial | none | 0 | ||
Plantain, buckhorn | Cool/ perennial | none | 0 | ||
Pokeweed | Warm/ perennial | X | none | X | |
Prickly sida | Warm/ perennial | X | none | 0 | |
Purple deadnettle | Cool/ annual | low | 0 | ||
Sicklepod | Warm/ annual | X | X | none | X |
Spiny amaranth/pigweed | Warm/ annual | X | none | 0 | |
Thistle, bull | Warm/ biennial | none | 0 | ||
Vaseygrass | Warm/ perennial | low | 0 | ||
name |
Introduction
A healthy, thriving pasture is a diverse system that includes plants and animals, both above ground and in the soil. Having a basic understanding and appreciation for the diversity can assist you in managing the valuable resource you have in your pasture. It is easy to focus on your livestock and lose focus of the other elements of the system that are essential to making all elements thrive. No one part of a pasture will do well without the other parts. As graziers, you will make decisions about the plants you encourage and discourage in your pastures in order that your livestock can produce a final product. Here are a few basics about plants that may make reading our articles about individual plants easier for you.
If you are able to identify the plants within your pastures and gain an understanding of their growth habits, their nutritive value, and the possible contributions or dangers they contribute to pasture ecology, you will be better able to manage your pasturelands and promote the growth of the plants you desire within the pasture. It’s important to consider the severity of infestation of undesirable plants as you make management decisions, especially using chemical controls. Controlling an undesirable plant using an herbicide may also kill desirable species. Reducing pasture diversity can have negative implications for wildlife. Alternative control methods may allow reducing the undesirable population to a tolerable level while maintaining the desirables. It is important to consider the larger picture.