Lawn burweed (Soliva pterosperma) is more commonly known as sticker weed due to the cluster of tiny seeds with spines that stick into tender flesh of bare feet, knees, and hands, that may come in contact with them at seed maturity.
Lawn burweed is best described as a low-growing, freely branched winter annual having leaves that are twice divided into narrow segments or lobes similar to the appearance of tiny carrot leaves. The real identifier is the small rosette button fruit clusters that form down in the leaf axils once the plant reaches a reproductive stage. At maturity, usually late spring and into summer is when we endure their pain from the dried sharp spines.
If you did not apply a pre-emergent herbicide earlier this fall to control winter annual weeds, and you had lawn burweed in your lawn last summer, then you most likely have them again now and will have to endure their painful spines for another summer each time you walk barefoot on your lawn unless you take action soon to control them.
Once the fruiting clusters have formed and produced the tiny seeds and spines killing the plants will eliminate the weeds, but the tiny spines and seed will remain to inflict pain for another summer.
Extension publication #1532 "Weed Control Guidelines for Mississippi" provides a list of several good post-emergent herbicide choices that will control this weed along with most other winter annual weed species, but timing is critical.
Published February 15, 2010
Dr. Wayne Wells is an Extension Professor and Turfgrass Specialist. His mailing address is Department of Plant and Soil Sciences, Mail Stop 9555, Mississippi State, MS 39762. wwells@ext.msstate.edu