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  1. Perennial sowthistle (Sanchus arvensis)

    https://pested.osu.edu/node/418

    problem is…perennial sowthistle causes reduced crop yields and increases costs of cultivation. ...

  2. Using Local Woodlot Lumber

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-9-03

    When air-drying alone, lumber can take several years to get to a 15%–20% moisture content depending on ... General Technical Report—113, Madison, Wisconsin, 1999. Reviewed May 20, 2016 by Sara J. Gurney, Wood ...

  3. Controlling Non-Native Invasive Plants in Ohio Forests: Japanese Stiltgrass

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-70-11

    132 (4),573–580. doi.org/10.3159/1095-5674(2005)132[573:ATCAOJ]2.0.CO;2 McGil, D.W., Grafton, W.N., ...

  4. Russian knapweed (Rhaponticum repens)

    https://pested.osu.edu/node/419

    allelopathic. The problem is…Russian knapweed persists in cultivated fields when established and produces deep ...

  5. Using the Tree Measuring Stick

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/F-62

    chart to figure the amount of firewood cords in each tree. Example: A 20-inch dbh tree that is 60-feet ...

  6. Getting the Most Return From Your Timber Sale

    https://ohioline.osu.edu/factsheet/f-37

    terms of the contract. Reviewed May 20, 2016 by Randall B. Heiligmann, Extension Specialist, Forestry; ...

  7. Grapevines, uncultivated & in groups > 100 (Vitus spp.)

    https://pested.osu.edu/node/400

    if they are growing in groups of 100 or more and are not maintained (pruned, sprayed, or cultivated ...

  8. Shatter cane (Sorghum bicolor)

    https://pested.osu.edu/node/412

    in height. Life cycle: Summer annual Habitat: Cultivated fields – especially cereal crops. Leaf: ...

  9. Russian thistle (Salsola Kali var. tenuifolia)

    https://pested.osu.edu/node/411

    Cultivated, fields, roadsides, railroad right-of ways, pastures, waste areas, irrigated areas, river bottoms, ...

  10. Canada Thistle (Cirsum arvense)

    https://pested.osu.edu/node/397

    aggressively. Hand-pulling and cultivation are often ineffective control mechanisms because new plants sprout ...

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