Hairy bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta)

Managing hairy bittercress early in container production can help growers improve their ornamental production.

weed-profile
Its shallow root system makes hairy bittercress easy to control by hand weeding.
Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut, Bugwood.org

Hairy bittercress (Cardamine hirsuta L.), also known as spring cress, lamb’s cress, winter bittercress, hairy cress, flick weed, wood cress and popping cress, is an important weed species of container nurseries and greenhouse operations. It is an annual or biennial, dicotyledonous plant, which belongs to the mustard family (Brassicaceae). It is native to Europe and Asia, but has established itself worldwide, including many parts of the U.S.

Habitat

Hairy bittercress occurs in a wide range of habitats such as bare land, grasslands, woodlands, forests, croplands, wastelands, roadsides and in garden areas. It can even be found growing in pieces of debris scattered over weed fabric in greenhouses, which helps spreading seeds to several feet, and infesting nearby containers. It proliferates well in partial to full sunlight under moderate temperatures. It can be found in moist fertile loamy or sandy soil as well as growing media.

Outdoors, hairy bittercress typically germinates in the fall, however it may appear throughout the year in greenhouses due to favorable growing conditions. In addition to competing with desirable plants, hairy bittercress is also known to be a host of many nursery insects such as mites and whiteflies and various pathogens of nursery plants.

Growth habit

Hairy bittercress appears as a dense basal rosette initially. Afterward, flowers and seeds are borne on a vertical growing stem, creating a more noticeable upright growth habit. Sometimes, it may have prostate growth, which makes control efforts via mowing ineffective.

Flowers develop into pods and mature quickly.

Roots

Hairy bittercress has a shallow and fibrous root system. This makes it easy to control by hand weeding and cultivation.

Shoot

The plant stem is glabrous and erect, 3 to 8 inches long, reddish, or purplish at the base and becoming greener towards the top of plant. During the initial growth, it develops a basal rosette which is comprised of compound leaves with two to four pairs of leaflets that are stalked and a terminal leaflet. The leaflet stalks are hairy. The leaflets are round to oval and there is a terminal leaflet, which is larger than others and is usually kidney shaped. Leaves are also present on the upright stem which are alternately arranged, rounded, 1.5- 5.5 cm long, sparsely hairy, have slightly serrated margins, have fewer leaflets, are generally smaller than the rosette leaves.

Flowers

Flowering occurs from anytime between March and June depending upon location. The flowering stalk originates from the center of rosette and flowers are present in small groups at the apex of stem, in clusters known as racemes. The flowers are small, white in color, with four petals (1.5-4.5 mm long) and four to six stamens.

Fruit and seeds

Hairy bittercress is a self-pollinating plant, and the seed pods grow on upper stem, above the leaves and below flowers. The flowers develop into pods and mature quickly. The seed pods split open and explosively disperse seeds when dry. Seed pods are cylindrical and point upwards, measuring 1.5 to 2.5 mm in length and 0.3-0.7 mm in width and contain tiny brown seeds (1 mm). Each plant produces up to 5,000 seeds. The forcible dispersal results in seeds being spread up to several feet away from the plant. The seeds of hairy bittercress have no dormancy requirements and can germinate quickly under favorable conditions.

Sources: Michigan State University Extension

Read Next

Bridging the gap

September 2024
Explore the September 2024 Issue

Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.