Smotherweed (Bassia)
Smotherweed Genus Details
Smotherweed leaves are alternate, simple and rough feeling. Flowers are found in small clusters collected in spiked panicles (flowering structures). Smotherweed was introduced from Eurasia and is now found all over the U.S., where it grows as an annual. Pollen is abundant and is wind disseminated. Generally it is worse in the summer month (June-July). This is one of the last weeds to be killed by autumn's frosts and is also considered an indicator of good soil.
Smotherweed Allergy Info
Pollen is abundant and is wind disseminated. Due to the fact that russian pigweed is a member of the chenopod family, a particularly allergenic plant group, it is likely a cause of allergy.
Smotherweed Pollen Description
The pollen grains of these families are spheroidal and pantoporate; the pores 20-65 per grain, usually circular, either globally distributed or in luminoid areas separated by muroid ridges; and the opercular granular. The sexine is often tegillate, undulating with a granular surface that is spinulose. The nexine is as thick as or often thinner than the sexine and the intine is generally thick or indistinct.
The pollen grains are 14-50 micrometers in diameter.
This plant is a member of the Chenopodiaceae pollen type group. This chenopod pollen grain photo represents all members of this group.
This plant is a member of the Chenopodiaceae pollen type group. This chenopod pollen grain photo represents all members of this group.
Species in This Genus
Allergenicity Legend:
Mild Allergen | Moderate Allergen | Severe Allergen | Allergy Test Available
Mild Allergen | Moderate Allergen | Severe Allergen | Allergy Test Available
Smotherweed (Bassia) is a genus of the CHENOPODIACEAE family.
This genus includes the following allergenic species:
This genus includes the following allergenic species: