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Yellow-Starthistle

(Centaurea solstitialis)

Yellow Starthistle (Centaurea solstitialis)
1A, not present in Montana

Quick ID

  • Similar looking flower to other knapweeds, but bright yellow, and with sharp, spiny bracts
  • Hairy leaves, giving the plant a grayish green color
  • Upper leaf bases extend down the stem to produce a fin or winglike appearance
Long green stem yellow spiky flower
Yellow Starthistle

Video Information


Weed Images

Toxic
Yellow Starthistle Rosette - photo by Steve Dewey, Utah State University, Bugwood.o
Yellow Starthistle Stem - photo by Ellen (Mel) Harte, Bugwood.org
Yellow Starthistle Spines - Peggy Greb. USDA Agricultural Research Service, Bugwood.org
Yellow Starthistle Mature - Photo by Cindy Roche, Bugwood.org
Yellow Starthistle flower
Yellow Starthistle Plant - Photo by Steve Dewey, Utah State University, Bugwood.org
Field of yellow plants - Photo by Steve Dewey, Utah State University, Bugwood.org

Weed Specifications

Weed Info
Type Information
Toxicity Toxic to horses, causing a fatal nervous order called chewing disease with no known treatment.
Best Management Practices

Herbicide, repeated mowing after bolting, controlled burning, targeted grazing with goats or sheep before flowers and spines form, biocontrol, pulling or digging on a small scale before flowering; weed free hay, seed, equipment, ATVs, etc.; maintain healthy landscapes, continued prevention.

Habitat Roadsides, rangeland, abandoned cropland, disturbed areas, trails, often occurring on south-facing slopes.
Root Very deep taproot.
Leaves Dandelion-looking rosette with lobed leaf margins, stem leaves narrower and their bases extend down the stem, giving them a fin or winglike appearance.
Lifespan Winter annual, germinating in the fall and maturing the following spring and summer, but sometimes germinates in the spring.
Similar Looking Plants Rosettes resemble dandelions, mustards, or other knapweeds.
Important Information Only reproduces by seed, with each plant capable of producing tens of thousands of seeds, seeds typically remaining viable for 3-5 years, but sometimes for more than twice that long; spines painful to humans, wildlife, and livestock, reducing recreation opportunities, degrading plant communities, and diminishing productive habitat; yellow starthistle is a Montana success story, thus far being identified and eradicated before it has been able to become established.

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