Control of Lantana in Pastures
Lantana flowers of purple and white and red and yellow, which are common.
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PDF-2012

Keywords

AG368

How to Cite

Ferrell, Jason, Brent Sellers, and Edward Jennings. 2012. “Control of Lantana in Pastures: SS-AGR-359 AG368, 2 2012”. EDIS 2012 (2). Gainesville, FL. https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-ag368-2012.

Abstract

Lantana is currently one of the top 10 most troublesome weeds in Florida. Although it is still sold as an ornamental, commercial varieties are sterile and considered to be non-invasive. It can quickly invade disturbed sites by producing plant toxins in its roots and stems, which either slow the growth of other plants or totally remove them. These leaf toxins are damaging to grazing animals. If animals consume the leaves, they often begin to show symptoms of skin peeling or cracking. Once animals show these symptoms, there is little or no treatment that can reverse the process. Although lantana's leaves are poisonous, its berries are not. Birds readily consume the fruit and disperse the seed. This 2-page fact sheet was written by J. Ferrell, B. Sellers, and E. Jennings, and published by the UF Department of Agronomy, February 2012.

SS-AGR-359/AG368: Control of Lantana in Pastures (ufl.edu)

https://doi.org/10.32473/edis-ag368-2012
view on EDIS
PDF-2012

References

USDA, NRCS. 2012. Plants Database: Lantana camara Plants Profile. Accessed February 23, 2012. http://plants.usda.gov/java/county?state_name=Florida&statefips=12&symbol=LACA2.

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