Portfolio: Medicinal Plants of the Sicangu Lakota

Investigation

Investigation of Ambrosia artemisiifolia Ragweed by Amelia

1sagebrush12

Ambrosia artemisiifolia. © 2008 1sagebrush12

Lakota names: caŋhlόgaŋ waśtémna means "sweet-smelling weed", caŋhlógaŋ oŋzipakiŋte means "weed to wipe the rear", poipiỵe means " to doctor swellings with." A tea from the leaves is applied to swellings.
sound iconListen to Lakota Plant Names: caŋhlόgaŋ waśtémna, c. oŋzipakiŋte, poipiỵe

Scientific name: Ambrosia artemisiifolia

Common name: ragweed

Description: Small ragweed is in 46 states in the United States. It is most common in the Eastern states and the Midwest. The plant produces up to 1 billion pollen grains in a year. It usually grows in rural areas. People get allergies from ragweed. When people are allergic to ragweed pollen and they inhale its pollen from the air, the common hay fever symptoms develop. Seventeen species of ragweed grow in North America. 75 percent of Americans who have allergies are allergic to ragweed. Once a person is allergic to pollen they tend to develop other pollen allergies. To know if you are allergic to ragweed you have to have a physical exam and a skin sensitivity test.

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Ambrosia artemisiifolia. © Steve Dewey, Utah State University.

Flowering: Flowers & Fruit: “Flower heads not showy, individually small, 2-5mm (1/12-1/5in.) across, green and inconspicuous but very numerous and forming distinctive inflorescences; individual florets either male or female, but never both; all flowers within one flower head either only male or female, but both male flower heads and female flower heads usually present on the same plant; heads of male (pollen-producing) flowers in raceme-like elongated clusters at ends of branches, each male head hanging downwards on a short stalk like a tiny inverted umbrella; female (seed-producing) flower heads in axils of short, narrow, green bracts near the base of each long cluster of male flower heads, each female head with only a single flower and producing a single, hard, somewhat triangular or diamond-shaped seed with several, short, sharp spines around the upper shoulder, the whole seed 3-5mm (1/8-1/5in.) long. Flowers from August to October.”

Similar Species: The Goldenrod, Solidago, is a similar species to ragweed. 

Black hills distribution: This plant is found all over the state of South Dakota.

Habitat: It is in cultivated land throughout southern Ontario. It is also in gardens, flower borders, poorly kept lawns, edges of sidewalks, roadsides, fence lines, and waste places.

Secondary Plant Compound: Thiarubrine A.

Information on the Internet

Education Standards

State Education Standards

National Education Standards

CONTENT STANDARD A: As a result of activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop

CONTENT STANDARD B: As a result of their activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop an understanding of

CONTENT STANDARD C: As a result of their activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop understanding of

CONTENT STANDARD E: As a result of activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop

CONTENT STANDARD F: As a result of activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop understanding of

CONTENT STANDARD G: As a result of activities in grades 9-12, all students should develop understanding of

About This Page

Author: 1sagebrush12
Classroom Project: Medicinal Plants of the Lakota Sioux
Lead-Deadwood High School
Lead, South Dakota United States

License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License - Version 3.0

Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to , Lead-Deadwood High School

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About This Portfolio
I would like to acknowledge the following individuals for their help with this project:

Robin Cochran-Dirksen
Lead-Deadwood High School

Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to Robin Cochran-Dirksen at

All Rights Reserved.

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