Agrimonia striata (roadside agrimony, grooved agrimony,[1] agrimony, cocklebur, woodland agrimony,[2] woodland grooveburr[3]) is a species of perennial forb belonging to the rose family (Rosaceae).
It grows to about 40 inches (1m) producing a dense cluster (raceme) of 5-parted yellow flowers on a hairy stalk above pinnately-divided leaves.
[1] It is native to the United States, Canada, and Saint Pierre and Miquelon.
[4] It is susceptible to downy mildew caused by the oomycete species Peronospora agrimoniae.
[5] The species name striata means "striped".