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As gardeners, we often identify our weeds as invasive, but under Ohio law, there are specific designations of weeds and certain legal processes that can apply to them. First, there are noxious ...
This April 7, 2008, image provided by Bugwood.org shows mouse-ear chickweed growing in Ohio. (Ohio State Weed Lab/The Ohio State University/Bugwood.org via AP) ... What common lawn weeds tell us.
See an earlier report on dangerous weeds in Ohio in the player above. COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — One of more than two dozen weeds designated by the state of Ohio as noxious — poison hemlock ...
Many gardeners define a weed as any plant growing where it’s not wanted. But what one person sees as a nuisance, another may ...
Poison hemlock was “relatively rare until 30 years ago,” but the weed is becoming more common in the state — too frequent to be fully eliminated, according to Ohio State University assistant ...
Ohio lawmakers included $330,000 in the most recent state budget to help fund controls at Mosquito Lake in Trumbull County, where hydrilla was identified in 2021, same as at Alum Creek Lake.
The weeds poison hemlock and wild parsnip are invasive to Ohio and toxic to humans. Here's what they look like and how to get rid of them. George Washington had claims to land near Cincinnati.
Opinion; Staking the future for an Ohio welcoming to native plants and weeds - and the pollinators that feast on them: editorial. Published: ; Feb. 28, 2025, 5:52 a.m.
Ohio lawmakers included $330,000 in the most recent state budget to help fund controls at Mosquito Lake in Trumbull County, where hydrilla was identified in 2021, same as at Alum Creek Lake.