It will depend on the concentrations. Salt will kill off plants and prevent them from sprouting. Well established plants have a better chance of survival, but a great deal of it will depend on the hardiness of the specific plant.
it will kill most small plants like little shrubs but will not affect trees and other large plants that much.
BAD! Aphids will kill the roses!
No, Crossbow weed killer will not kill tulips. The herbicide in question will target woody plants, such as brush, shrubs, thickets and trees. It will not touch edibles or ornamentals, such as flowers, grasses, herbs and vegetables.
no they dont
The plant guy at Home Deport says that the outdoor bleach has been made to not kill shrubs or bushes. But other than that, I don't know.
Yes, stranger vines can kill trees. They girdle bushes, herbs, grasses, shrubs and trees from bottom to top. The girdling or strangling activity by runners, suckers or tendrils massively generated by prolific seeding kills non-woody and woody plants by monopolizing all light and moisture inputs from air, land and water bodies.
you kill a lot of things and you kill the trees
Bleach.
No because a meteor came down and kill everything and after that plants were thefirst living things like grass, then shrubs, little trees, lastly full grown trees. Then the animals started from the bacteria to small animals like insects to birds to mammal etc.
i want to help with this 1.you can kill trees by oil
spray infected areas with soapy water
Herbicides are designed to kill unwanted plants, known as weeds. They can target a wide range of plants, including broadleaf weeds like dandelions, grassy weeds like crabgrass, and even woody plants like shrubs and trees. The specific plants that a herbicide will kill depend on the active ingredients and application method used.