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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TumbleweedTumbleweed - Wikipedia

    The tumbleweed dispersal strategies are unusual among plants; most species disperse their seeds by other mechanisms. Many tumbleweeds establish themselves on broken soil as opportunistic agricultural weeds. Tumbleweeds have been recorded in the following plant groups: Amaranthaceae (including Chenopodiaceae) Amaryllidaceae; Asphodelaceae ...

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  3. Feb 7, 2022 · Part cultural icon and part invasive nuisance, tumbleweeds have an intriguing and tangled history.

  4. This is where the name Russian thistle originates, said Ayres, although tumbleweeds aren’t thistles. The weed spread quickly through the United States — on rail cars, through contamination of ...

  5. It’s silent and windless. Yet one by one, like wolves in the night, tumbleweeds start gathering around them. “They’re following us,” the heroine cries.

  6. Jun 14, 2024 · Tumbleweed, plant that breaks away from its roots and is driven about by the wind as a light rolling mass, scattering seeds as it goes. Examples include pigweed (Amaranth retroflexus, a widespread weed in the western United States) and other amaranths, tumbling mustard, Russian thistle, the steppe.

  7. The arrival and spread of Russian thistle is considered to be one of the fastest plant invasions in the history of the United States. Today the plant is found in all states except Alaska and Florida. Tumbleweeds in a roadside ditch in Haskell County, Kansas, being burned in 1941.