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Local Significant Allergens for Dona Ana County, New Mexico in Fall

We consider Fall to be September, October and November.

The plants listed below have been documented to grow in your state, and to flower during the season indicated nationally. Flowering time pertains to the particular season of the year that a species is most likely to occur within your area. Although the flowering period for any particular species may be fairly extensive, the pollination period itself (which may cause allergic symptoms to those sensitive) is generally much more abbreviated.
Mild Allergen   Moderate Allergen   Severe Allergen  
Weeds

Annual Ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) Carruth's Sagebrush (Artemisia carruthii) Chinese Mustard (Brassica juncea) Dragon Wormwood (Artemisia dracunculus) Five-Horn Smotherweed (Bassia hyssopifolia) Flat-Spine Burr-Ragweed (Ambrosia acanthicarpa) Four-Wing Saltbush (Atriplex canescens) Great Plains False Willow (Baccharis salicina) Mat Amaranth (Amaranthus blitoides) Pacific Wormwood (Artemisia campestris) Palmer's Amaranth (Amaranthus palmeri) Pennsylvania Pellitory (Parietaria pensylvanica) Perennial Ragweed (Ambrosia psilostachya) Rape (Brassica rapa) Short-Leaf False Willow (Baccharis brachyphylla) Silver Sagebrush (Artemisia filifolia) Silverscale (Atriplex argentea) Smooth Amaranth (Amaranthus hybridus) Tumbling Orache (Atriplex rosea) Weak-Leaf Burr-Ragweed (Ambrosia confertiflora) White Sagebrush (Artemisia ludoviciana) Wright's False Willow (Baccharis wrightii)
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