New Mexico State University
College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences | ACES
NMSU: Selected Plants of Navajo Rangelands

Selected Plants of Navajo Rangelands

Take care of our Navajo Rangelands

Snakeweed

(a.k.a. broom snakeweed)
Narrow, widely spaced yellow rays and darker yellow disk flowers

Snakeweed is a woody subshrub with numerous erect ascending branches. It has small, evergreen, linear leaves and tufts of tiny yellow flowers in fall. Though snakeweed was once considered a weed of overgrazed rangelands, some research suggests that its population cycles over time are more related to precipitation patterns than to overgrazing.

Broom snakeweed provides little value to livestock and can be toxic, causing illness, death, or abortion in sheep, goats, and cattle during winter and early spring when it is the only thing green and may be consumed in large quantities.

Flower cluster with multiple small branches
Growth habits, which looks almost like a small shrub due to the many branched stems
Growth habit and glimpse of rocky brushland habitat
Branching habit with multiple stems topped by flower clusters; leaves are narrow, arranged sparsely on stems
Close-up of flowers showing disk flowers with protruding styles and stigmas
Close-up of dusky green linear leaf
Growth habit with multiple branched stems

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