Corispermum is a genus of plants in the family Amaranthaceae. Common names given to members of the genus involve bugseed, tickseed, and tumbleweed. In general, these are erect annual plants with flat, thin leaves and topped with inflorescences of flowers with long bracts. Bugseeds are native to North America and Eurasia, but little is known about their taxonomy and distribution.
Corispermum hyssopifolium is a species in the genus Corispermum of the family Amaranthaceae. It is found in dunes and sandy spots along rivers in central...
Corispermum pallasii, common name Pallas bugseed, is a plant apparently native to Siberia but naturalized in Europe, Canada, and the Great Lakes Region...
Corispermum ulopterum is a species of flowering plant in the family Amaranthaceae, native to Irkutsk Oblast in Siberia. It is found only on the beaches...
any such seed in general, but more specifically to: Bidens Coreopsis Corispermum Desmodium This page is an index of articles on plant species (or higher...
tepals (missing in some Corispermum species) without vascular bundles, not persistent. The pollen grains of Agriophyllum and Corispermum are of the "Chenopodium...
form tumbleweeds include Kochia species, Cycloloma atriplicifolium, and Corispermum hyssopifolium, which are called plains tumbleweed. Atriplex rosea is...
Russia), without endemic genera, with but few endemic species (e.g. Corispermum algidum, Castilleja schrenkii) West Siberian Province (parts of Russia...
kali var. vulgaris W.D.J.Koch Several heterotypic synonyms including: Corispermum pilosum Raf. Kali turgidum (Dumort.) Gutermann Salsola aptera Iljin Salsola...
Bugseed is a common name for a plant that may refer to: Corispermum, Chenopodiaceae Dicoria canescens, Asteraceae This page is an index of articles on...
Adults are on wing in August. The larvae feed on Climacopiera species and Corispermum aralo-caspicum. Larvae can be found from May to June. Wikimedia Commons...
generations per year. The larvae feed on the flowers of Corispermum species, including Corispermum lehmannianum. They create a silky, short, thick case....