Plants of South Eastern New South Wales

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Leucanthemum vulgare

Common name

Oxeye daisy, Dog daisy, Field daisy, Marguerite, Moon daisy, Moon-penny, Poor-land flower, Poverty weed, White daisy

Family

Asteraceae

Where found

Garden escape. Woodland, grassy areas, disturbed sites, roadsides, and moist places. Widespread. .Mainly ranges west of the Sydney area.

Notes

Introduced perennial herb to 0.9 m tall. Stems grooved, more or less hairless above, more or less hairy (with simple or branched hairs below  (needs a hand lens or a macro app on your phone/tablet to see). Basal leaves withering early. Stem leaves alternating up the stems, the lower leaves 4-15 cm long, 20-50 mm wide, tips blunt, margins coarsely toothed, scalloped or shallowly lobed, surfaces more or less hairless, bases stem-clasping; stalkless. Upper leaves smaller, sometimes entire, bases often auriculate towards the flower heads. Flower heads below the 'petals' 20-60 mm in diameter, with 15-40 white 'petals' 10-20 mm long and a yellow centre, in clusters of 1-3. Flowers Spring to Autumn.

General Biosecurity Duty all NSW. General Biosecurity Duty with additional restrictions in the Central Tablelands, Murray, and Riverina areas, NSW. Noxious weed Vic.

PlantNET description:  http://plantnet.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/NSWfl.pl?page=nswfl&lvl=sp&name=Leucanthemum~vulgare (accessed 22 January, 2021)