Bradford pear trees, an incredibly invasive and non-native species, are back and spreading fast across Missouri.
OSU Extension recommends these native trees to plant as an alternative to the pretty but harmful Bradford pear trees: The ...
"Whoever thought planting them was a good idea deserves to have their car totaled by one in a mild breeze," one woman wrote.
That means thanks to the Bradford Pear Bounty program, the landscape is rid of thousands of the trees that stink like rotten ...
Here's what to know about Bradford pear trees and what native alternatives you can plant instead. Pyrus calleryana, also ...
Starting in 2027 there will be a quarantine on Callery pear trees per the Kansas Department of Agriculture. This means ...
In this episode of Growing the Ozarks, host Kelly McGowan of the University of Missouri Extension talks with Springfield ...
The Bradford pear tree is an invasive tree to the state of AL. See why this "fishy" tree is a nuisance to the state ...
The Bradford pear (Pyrus callerana "Bradford") was originally developed as a way to help control fire blight in pear trees.
The invasive Callery (Bradford) pear trees are now in full bloom, but a buyback on the trees won’t happen this spring.
Bradford pear trees are a variety of the callery pear, which was introduced to the U.S. from Asia in the early 1900s in an attempt to fight the fire blight of the common pear. The seeds of these ...
A Bradford pear tree in bloom is a sure sign ... Introduced in the mid-1960s, the popular cultivar of Callery pear was once a favorite among landscapers. They were also pest-resistant and disease ...