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Gardening

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Botany

(72,459 posts)
Sat May 30, 2020, 06:35 AM May 2020

The Familiar Plants and Animals That Invaded America's Landscape [View all]

https://www.discovermagazine.com/planet-earth/the-familiar-plants-and-animals-that-invaded-americas-landscape


Growing up, I loved honeysuckle. My friends and I couldn’t wait to pull at the blossoms and inhale their sweet smell. That was childhood life in crowded Midwestern suburbia. But now that I’ve spent the last 20 years surrounded by farmland, I’ve seen the dark side of bush honeysuckle, watching as my childhood favorite reaches across fence lines and chokes out our local woods.

I’ve also come to realize that many of the species I encounter every day are also not-so-friendly intruders. Those fat earthworms wriggling on my garden trowel, the honeybees buzzing in the flowers and the feral cats sheltering in my neighbor’s barn are also aliens among us. (Yep, even those sunny-faced interloping daffodils have escaped the garden gate.)

You probably encounter species every day that are not native to our shores. In general, a species in the U.S. is considered non-native if wasn’t here before European settlers arrived some 400 years ago. Today, every corner of the U.S. harbors impostors to its native ecosystems, regardless of whether they arrived on purpose or accidentally. These non-natives are considered invasive once they start to harm the environment or economy. Here are some of the most surprising offenders.

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Add to the list of non native invasive plants: Norway Maples (Crimson King), english ivy, winter creeper euonymus, burning bush ,
privet, rose of sharon, day lily, barberry, vinca, and buckthorn.
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Honeysuckle is very very invasive. Hard to pull up and kill out too. SWBTATTReg May 2020 #1
Cut it off @ ground level and paint the cut with glyphosate or triclopyr. Botany May 2020 #2
Thanks. I'll give it a shot. I don't object to chemicals, after all, isn't everything pretty well SWBTATTReg May 2020 #3
If you are getting either the glyphosate or the triclopyr get the concentrate ... Botany May 2020 #4
Thanks, I'm in the Ozarks, so I'm just going to let the native plants take back over... SWBTATTReg May 2020 #10
make sure that the plants that move back in are native .... Botany May 2020 #11
Thanks, will do. SWBTATTReg May 2020 #12
You might want to try some Blackjack Oaks Botany May 2020 #14
Thank you! We have quite a selection of oaks, as well as hickory and ash, and other odds and ends. SWBTATTReg May 2020 #15
R you close to the Buffalo River? Botany May 2020 #16
Located next to the Niangua river, about a mile from the back exit/entrance to Bennett Springs SWBTATTReg May 2020 #17
Buckthorn is a fucking scourge. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2020 #5
Another plant brought in by the landscape/nursery industry .... lesser celandine Botany May 2020 #6
i've never seen that plant; I think we're too cold for it here. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2020 #7
Sorry it is "Nature's Best Hope." The Living Landscape is a good one too. Botany May 2020 #8
Minnesota, Zone 4. The Velveteen Ocelot May 2020 #9
Vinca is the unwelcome invader in my garden. steventh May 2020 #13
Ardisia, Chinese tallow trees, and Mexican petunias are what I am fighting csziggy May 2020 #18
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