Gardening expert Graham Rice has shared the invasive species of plants people should be on the look out for in their garden - ...
Homeowners have been warned to look out for Japanese knotweed when viewing potential new properties as the invasive plant is ...
Garden experts have labelled a plant 'the new Japanese Knotweed’ as reports of it destroying people’s homes and gardens spread across the UK. Brits have been offered advice on what they should ...
So far the results show a particular concentration of knotweed in South Wales, the Midlands, London, Scotland's central belt and Cornwall - where the plant was also introduced by Victorians into ...
If you’re not a paid subscriber to Gardenista and Remodelista, you’re in for a treat this month. Every Sunday until the end ...
The world's largest field trial on the control of Japanese knotweed, conducted in Wales, has found that eradicating the plant is not possible. Researchers from Swansea University have carried out ...
If you buy a house with Japanese knotweed in the winter, it will make its presence known come spring. That's when the reddish ...
Japanese knotweed, a terrestrial herbaceous plant that is in the Polygonaceae family, invades along rivers, streams, roads, and in disturbed areas or where dumped. It prefers full sun and rich soils ...
Giant knotweed, a terrestrial herbaceous plant in the Polygonaceae family, invades along waterways, roads, forest openings, and disturbed sites where dumped. Key characteristics of this invasive ...
There are over 100 invasive plant species in Connecticut, a number that has been steadily increasing over the past few decades.
Knotweed grows rapidly, displacing native plants, destabilizing riverbanks and causing damage to infrastructure, including ...