Weeds Identification Gallery

Hairy Fleabane

  • Conyza bonariensis
  • Sunflower Family: Asteraceae
Updated: 11/2025

Hairy fleabane, a common summer annual or biennial broadleaf of disturbed, unmanaged areas and cultivated fields, may be confused with horseweed, Conyza canadensis. Hairy fleabane is found in the Central Valley, central-western region, and southwestern region, to about 3300 feet (1000 m). It inhabits agricultural lands and other disturbed areas competing strongly for water and growing rapidly.

Habitat

Roadsides, agronomic croplands, landscaped areas, container nurseries, orchards, vineyards, ditch and canal banks, and urban sites, and disturbed, unmanaged areas.

Seedling showing long, narrow, stalkless leaves with shallow teeth next to seedling of marestail; . Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Young plant. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM

Seedling

The cotyledons (seed leaves) are gray green and about twice as long as wide, hairless or nearly so, with short stalks. Leaves are alternate to one another along the stem. The first leaf is oval to narrowly football shaped and sparsely or densely covered with hairs. Seedlings of hairy fleabane and horseweed are similar and difficult to distinguish. One feature to separate the two is that the leaves of hairy fleabane are gray green, narrower, and more crinkled than those of horseweed.

A green weed with oval leaves grows on brown soil, with visible dew droplets on its surface. Copyright information is at the bottom (Copyright 2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.). Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources
Seedling. Credit: Joseph M. DiTomaso, UC Agriculture and Natural Resources

Mature Plant

The mature plant can reach almost 4 feet (1.2 m) tall. It is well branched. Leaves are gray green and are covered with both short, stiff and long, soft hairs. Leaves are alternate to one another along the stem. Leaf edges range from smooth to weakly toothed or lobed. Upper leaves are linear to lance shaped. Lower leaves are generally egg shaped and taper to a short stalk. Although similar to horseweed, hairy fleabane branches more, has more basal leaves, and its stems usually branch near the base. Horseweed stems usually branch only in the upper half of the plant. Horseweed leaves only have short, stiff hairs, not a combination of short, stiff and long, soft hairs found in hairy fleabane. Fleabane typically is never over 4 feet (1.2 m) tall, but horseweed can reach over 9 feet (2.7 m) tall.

Mature plant showing long, narrow leaves and spherical, mature flower head of gray seed hairs (pappus). Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Mature plant. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM

Flowers

Flowers bloom from June through September. Upper branches contain many flowering stalks and there is one flower head per stalk. The flower head has a green, cup-shaped base formed by green leaflike structures (bracts) that overlap. The base tapers toward the top and encloses tiny, yellow flowers (disk flowers) that are surrounded by small, cream-colored bristles. As the fruit develop the head opens up and the bristles loosen.

Flower showing small creamy white petals, and fruit with seed hairs in spherical shape; . Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM
Flower heads. Credit: Jack Kelly Clark, UC IPM

Fruits

The fruiting head looks somewhat like the “puffball” of a dandelion fruiting head but much smaller. It consists of bristle bearing seeds radiating outward, forming a fuzzy, spherical, cream-colored "head". 

Seeds

Seeds are tiny, narrow, football shaped, or oblong, and approximately 1/17 of an inch (1.5 mm) long. Attached to the seed are brownish-white bristles that often redden with age. Horseweed bristles are mostly dirty white.

Close-up of three seeds on a black background. Each seed has multiple thin filaments coming from one central location. A 1 millimeter scale indicates size and shows the seeds are 5 to 6 millimeters. Copyright information is at the bottom (Copyright 2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.). Credit: James A. O'Brien, University of California
Seeds. Credit: James A. O'Brien, University of California

Reproduction

Reproduces by seed.

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