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Uses and Benefits of Mouse Ear Hawkweed

Mouse ear hawkweed Quick Facts
Name: Mouse ear hawkweed
Scientific Name: Pilosella officinarum syn. Hieracium pilosella
Origin Europe, western Asia and northern Asia
Colors Purple-black
Shapes Achenes with slender bristles about 1.5-2 mm long, narrowed at the base, and with a tawny pappus
Taste Pungent
Health benefits Beneficial for asthma, heal wounds, wheeziness, nosebleeds, whooping cough, bronchitis, liver diseases, hemorrhages, diarrhea and inflammation of the intestine, congested and chronic coughs, enteritis, influenza, pyelitis, cystitis, menstrual bleeding
Pilosella officinarum (synonym Hieracium pilosella), known as mouse-ear hawkweed, is a yellow-flowered species of flowering plant in the daisy family Asteraceae. The plant is native to Europe (i.e. Denmark, Finland, Ireland, the UK, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzerland, Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Ukraine, western Russia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Romania, Yugoslavia, France, Portugal and Spain), western Asia (i.e. Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia) and northern Asia (i.e. western Siberia). Mouse-ear hawkweed is considered as a potential environmental weed or “sleeper weed” in south-eastern Australia. Some of the popular common names of the plants are hawkweed, mouse ear hawkweed, mouseear hawkweed, Felon Herb, Mouse-ear, Pilosella and mouse-eared hawkweed.

The entire plant, barring the flowering parts, is swathed with glandular bristles, which are generally white, but occasionally reddish when growing on the stems. Like most hawkweed species, it is highly variable and is a member of a species complex of several dozens of subspecies and hundreds of varieties and forms. It is an allelopathic plant. None of the Hawkweeds are now much used in herbal treatment, though in many parts of Europe they were previously used as a continuous medicine in diseases of the lungs, asthma and incipient consumption, but the small Mouse-ear Hawkweed, known commonly as Mouse-ear is still collected and used by herbalists for its medicinal properties.

Mouse Ear Hawkweed Facts

Name Mouse ear hawkweed
Scientific Name Hieracium pilosella syn. Pilosella officinarum
Native Europe (i.e. Denmark, Finland, Ireland, the UK, Norway, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzerland, Belarus, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Ukraine, western Russia, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Romania, Yugoslavia, France, Portugal and Spain), western Asia (i.e. Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia) and northern Asia (i.e. western Siberia)
Common Names Hawkweed, mouse ear hawkweed, mouseear hawkweed, Felon Herb, Mouse-ear, Pilosella, mouse-eared hawkweed
Name in Other Languages Albanian: Këmashna me pak lesh
Austria: Kleines habichtskrau; langhaariges habichtskraut; mausohr-habichtskraut          
Basque: Bilorria, erabia-belarra, sagu-belarra
Belarusian: Jastrabok valasisty (Ястрабок валасісты)
Bulgarian: Vlaknesta rumyanka (влакнеста румянка), miši uši (миши уши)
Catalan: Filosella, herba cancer, herba de Sant Joan, herba del mal blanc, herba luda, herba vellutada, orella de rata, pelosella, peludella, pilosella
Croatian: Mala runjika  
Czech: Chlupáček zední, jestřábník chlupáček    
Danish: Håret høgeurt, Mus-øre
Dutch: Muizenoor, muizeoor     
English: Mouse-ear hawkweed, Mouseear hawkweed, Hawkweed. Pilosella. Mouse Ear, mouse-eared hawkweed       
Estonian: Harilik karutubakas, karvane hunditubakas     
Finnish: Huopakeltano, Huopavoikeltano
French: Herbe à l’épervier, oreille de rat, oreille de souris, piloselle, piloselle de rat, veluette, épervière officinale, épervière piloselle         
German: Gewöhnliches Habichtskraut, kleines Habichtskraut, langhaariges Habichtskraut, Mausohrhabichtskraut, Kleines Habichtskraut, Mausohr, Mausohr-Habichtskraut; Mausöhrlein
Hungarian: Ezüstös hölgymál     
Irish: Searbh na muc      
Italian: Orecchio di topo, pelosella, sparviere pelosetto, pelosetta
Latvian: Matainā pamauraga      
Lithuanian: Vienagraižė kudlė
Netherlands: Muizeoor
Norwegian: Mus-øre
Northern Sami: Duobusfivli
Occitan: Pelouso, Peludello        
Polish: Jastrzębiec kosmaczek  
Portuguese: Orelha-de-lebre, pilosela-das-boticas, piloselas      
Romanian: Vulturică      
Russian: yastrebinka volosistaya  (ястребинка волосистая), yastrebinochka obyknovenna (ястребиночка обыкновенна)               
Serbian: Obična runjika (обична руњика)           
Slovak: Chlpánik lekársky, chlpánik obyčajný      
Slovene: Dolgodlakava škržolica, kosmatica        
Spanish: Achicoria, candelaria de los jardines, cepillo, cerrillejo, coca de Polonia, hierba de la salud, oreja de liebre, oreja de ratón, pelosilla, pelosilla mayor, pilosella, vellosilla, velosilla, árnica          
Swedish: Gråfibbla, vanlig gråfibbla        
Switzerland: Kleines habichtskraut, langhaariges habichtskraut, mausohr-habichtskraut, oreille de souris
Turkish: Tırnakotu          
Welsh: Clust y llygoden
Plant Growth Habit Prostrate, sprawling, hispid, monocarpic perennial herbaceous plant
Growing Climates Upland pastures, meadows, heaths, banks, on walls, sheep-grazed grasslands, along roadsides, sparse bushes, in sunny pine and oak forests, gravel and clay pits, quarries, on fallow fields, tussock grasslands, lawns, wasteland, river terraces, rock outcrops, agricultural areas, dry prairies, railroads, and other disturbed sites
Soil Grows well on sandy and similarly less fertile ground types, particularly in disturbed or waste areas
Plant Size In between 15-30 cm tall and stolons can be 10-25 cm long
Root Root system is comprised of fibrous roots and stolons
Stem Erect, leafless, and unbranched, and sticky-hairy or somewhat wooly-hairy, mainly near the base
Leaf Elliptic, 3-10 cm long, 1-5-2 cm in width, with distinctive white midvein. The lower leaf surface is covered with a dense layer of stellate hairs, and long, simple eglandular hairs cover both upper and lower leaf surfaces and the leaf margin
Flowering season May to August
Flower Flowering stem (scape) is generally between 5–50 centimetres (2.0–19.7 in) tall, and sprouts from the center of the basal rosette. The flower heads are borne singly on the scape and are a pale lemon-yellow color, with the outermost ligules having a reddish underside
Fruit Shape & Size Achenes with slender bristles about 1.5-2 mm long, narrowed at the base, and with a tawny pappus
Fruit Color Purple-black
Seed Seeds are purplish black, short, columnar with many white bristles (pappus) on one end of the seed which act like a parachute as the wind distributes the seed
Propagation Stolons, rhizomes and seeds
Taste Pungent
Plant Parts Used Aerial parts
Season November – April – (May)
Precautions
  • Excess use may cause skin irritation.

Plant Description

Mouse ear hawkweed is a prostrate, sprawling, hispid, monocarpic perennial herbaceous plant that normally grows between 15-30 cm tall and stolons can be 10-25 cm long. The plant is found growing in upland pastures, meadows, heaths, banks, on walls, sheep-grazed grasslands, along roadsides, sparse bushes, in sunny pine and oak forests, gravel and clay pits, quarries, on fallow fields, tussock grasslands, lawns, wasteland, river terraces, rock outcrops, agricultural areas, dry prairies, railroads, and other disturbed sites. It grows well on sandy and similarly less fertile ground types, mostly in disturbed or waste areas. Mouse-ear is a creeping herb that usually grows like a carpet on crawling runners, every one of which takes the form of a basal rosette of oval-shaped leaves. The root system is comprised of fibrous roots and stolons. The stolons can generate a new rosette at their extremity; each rosette has the possibility of developing into a new clone forming dense mats in open space. Stems are erect, leafless, and unbranched, and sticky-hairy or somewhat wooly-hairy, mainly near the base.

Leaves

Leaves are all basal except for the occasional scale-like leaf along the flowering stem. Basal leaves are 1 to 4 inches long, 1/3 to ¾ inch wide, generally elliptic, widest at or above the middle, blunt or pointed at the tip, tapering to wedge-shaped at the base, and toothless. The upper surface is sparsely to moderately cover in spreading hairs 1/8 to ¼+ inch long, the lower surface is white from a dense covering of shorter, star-shaped hairs mixed with long, spreading hairs. Flower stalks are long, leafless, and covered in stiff dark hairs. Leaves of the stolons are small and narrowly elliptic.

Flowers

The flowering stem (scape) sprouts from the center of the basal rosette. It is usually much taller than the leaves. The plant normally consists of a single flower, occasionally 2 or 3, at the tip of a hairy, leafless stem. Flowers are yellow, dandelion-like, ¾ to 1 inch across with up to 120 petals (ray flowers), the outer rays often with a red stripe on the back side.

The bracts (phyllaries) surrounding the base of the flower are in 1 or 2 layers, lance-linear, tapering to a pointed tip, and densely covered in a mix of blackish glandular and non-glandular hairs and long, white, bristly hairs. Flower stalks are also covered in a mix of blackish glandular and non-glandular hairs, and long, white, bristly hairs. Flowers open daily at 8 a.m. and close about 2 p.m. Flowering normally takes place in between May to August.

Fruit

Fertile flowers are followed by achenes with slender bristles about 1.5-2 mm long, narrowed at the base, and with a tawny pappus. Fruits can be found purple to black with off white hairs that are 0.2 in. (5 mm) long. The fruit are usually dispersed by the wind.

Traditional uses and benefits of Mouse ear hawkweed

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2RtBUFDsNE

Recommended Infusion and Tincture

Medicinally, mouse-ear is used in the form of an infusion as well as a tincture.

Infusion: To prepare the infusion from mouse-ear add one to two teaspoonful of the dehydrated herb in a cup (250 ml) of boiling water and allow it to permeate for about 10 to 15 minutes. For optimum results, this infusion ought to be drunk three times daily.

Tincture: The tincture prepared from mouse-ear ought to be taken in dosage of 1 ml to 4 ml three times every day.

Mouse-ear is generally gathered between the period of May and June when the plants are in flowering season.

Prevention and Control

Due to the variable regulations around (de)registration of pesticides, your national list of registered pesticides or relevant authority should be consulted to control which products are legally allowed for use in your country when considering chemical control. Pesticides should always be used in a lawful manner, consistent with the product’s label.

Cultural Control

The main method of control at present is to improve pasture land by application of fertilizer and over sowing with pasture species. However, species of Hieracium/Pilosella remain a problem on areas of limited potential economic development, abandoned land, reserves and national parks. Timely over sowing and top dressing combined with intensive grazing show promise for control. Makepeace et al. discovered that of all the plant species investigated, clover is the best competitor. Where perennial grasses, legumes, and other beneficial forbs are present in the plant community, fertilizers can help control Hieracium/Pilosella species by increasing the competitive ability of more desirable species.

Mechanical Control

Due to its low, mat-forming growth, mowing is not effective. Mechanical control is ineffective since small fragments of plants can root and form new populations. In addition, plants or plant parts can be accidentally transported by machinery and establish elsewhere.

Chemical Control

Species of Hieracium/Pilosella have proved resistant to most herbicides, so that chemical control of the weed does not appear practical. P. officinarum can be controlled with 2, 4-D amine or ester, and a mecoprop + MCPA + dicamba formulation, although results have been variable. This variability in effectiveness was thought to be related to the time of application. The 2, 4-D ester usually yielded better results than the amine formulation. However, total kill is unlikely and follow up with fertilizer and top dressing is considered essential. A problem with chemical control is that the chemicals have as much, or more, impact on many desirable pasture species than they do on P. officinarum. In many areas in New Zealand chemical control is uneconomic and thus not considered on a large scale.

Biological Control

Since chemical and mechanical control methods are ineffective and/or not economical, a program to develop biological control with insects and a pathogen was initiated in 1992. P. officinarum is not attacked to any noticeable degree by phytophagous insects in New Zealand, therefore presenting a competitive advantage over native rangeland species. The rust fungus Puccinia hieracii var. piloselloidarum was chosen as a potential biological control agent. However, during the investigations prior to its introduction, it was detected in the field in New Zealand but further strains may need to be tested and released to infect the various biotypes of P. officinarum. In addition to this rust fungus, five herbivorous insects of European origin, Oxyptilus pilosellae (Lepidoptera, Pterophoridae), Aulacidea subterminalis (Hymenoptera, Cynipidae), Macrolabis pilosellae (Diptera, Cecidomyiidae) Cheilosia Urbana (Diptera, Syrphidae) and Cheilosia psilophthalma (Hymenoptera, Syrphidae) were studied and are approved for release in New Zealand. The insects attack different parts of the plant and are at least genus-specific.

Integrated Control

All risks which predispose short-tussock grasslands to P. officinarum invasion should be minimized. Instead, emphasis should be placed on sound land management including adequate fertilizing, avoidance of heavy grazing and burning, rabbit control, sowing of competitive pasture species, controlled grazing in the absence of P. officinarum flower heads and the use of classical biological control agents which stress or even kill P. officinarum.

Other Facts

References:

https://www.itis.gov/servlet/SingleRpt/SingleRpt?search_topic=TSN&search_value=37720#null

https://pfaf.org/user/Plant.aspx?LatinName=Pilosella+officinarum

http://www.floracatalana.net/hieracium-pilosella-l-

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilosella_officinarum

https://gringlobal.irri.org/gringlobal/taxonomydetail.aspx?id=104350

https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/HIEPI

https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/27162

https://www.botanical.com/botanical/mgmh/h/hawmou08.html

https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=HIPI

http://issg.org/database/species/ecology.asp?si=1640&fr=1&sts=&lang=EN

http://www.theplantlist.org/tpl1.1/record/gcc-25499

https://wiki.bugwood.org/Hieracium_pilosella

https://www.minnesotawildflowers.info/flower/mouse-ear-hawkweed

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