Giant Hogweed Identification Guide Heracleum Mantegazzianum

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Giant Hogweed Identification Guide Heracleum Mantegazzianum Giant Hogweed Identification Guide Heracleum mantegazzianum Giant Hogweed Has Been Reported in the Southeast! A population of giant hogweed was recently confirmed in Virginia. A landscaped planting had escaped and spread. Whenever a new population of this dangerous plant is found, it is important to report it. Giant hogweed can be reported to EDDMapS.org or to the County Extension Agent. Giant hogweed was found on three occasions in the North Carolina mountain region a few years ago. One report was from a residential garden. The other two reports were from the same county. A single plant was found in a drainage ditch along a roadway, and the other was a single plant alongside a small stream. These escaped populations were found in the type of habitat where giant hogweed does well. All three populations were removed. Giant hogweed can be successfully controlled if it is found, reported and removed quickly, as it was in North Carolina and Virginia. Giant hogweed is an herbaceous plant that can grow up to 15-20 feet in height. Giant hogweed can outcompete native species for habitat, especially in riparian zones. It is found along roadsides, empty untended lots, wet ditches and along streams and rivers. It prefers rich, moist soil, in semi-shade conditions. This plant is on the federal noxious weed list because of its toxic sap. This sap makes skin very sensitive to UV radiation, causing blistering and severe burns. Caution should be taken when handling this weed. Giant hogweed, Heracleum mantegazzianum’s specs: Stems: Hollow and usually blotched with purple. Both stems and leaf stalks have bristly hairs. The stem can be 2-4 inches in diameter. Leaves: Leaves are sharply and deeply lobed and up to 5 feet across. Seedling leaves are much less deeply lobed. Flowers: Blooms from in summer. Small white flowers are held in flat topped clusters that can be 2.5 feet wide. In the photo above, leg burns caused Fruits: Tan ovals less than 1 inch long with small, dark seeds by exposure to sun after contact with sap from giant hogweed. inside. Plants can produce 20,00 seeds in a season. PLANTS Giant hogweed, Heracleum mantegazzianum: Extremely Toxic Most of these plants are in the carrot family and are closely related. They look alike in many ways. This guide will focus on how each of the other species listed here is different from giant hogweed. Stems are green with purple splotches and coarse white hairs -thick circle of hairs at base of leaf stalk, 2-4 inches in diameter. Compound, lobed, deeply incised, up to 5 feet wide. White umbrella-shaped flower clusters up to 2.5 feet wide with 50 or more rays per cluster. Water hemlock, Cicuta maculata: Water hemlock is extremely poisonous. Biennial to short lived perennial plant from 3-9 feet tall. Rounded stems are green to reddish purple. Double or triple pinnately compound leaves can be up to 1 foot long by 2 feet wide. Small white flowers are in many flat topped clusters only about 6 inches across. Poison hemlock, Conium maculatum: Poison hemlock is native to Europe and is extremely poisonous.It is a biennial herbaceous plant from 3-8 feet tall. Stems are very smooth and waxy. The purple spotting is variable. Some plants have almost no purple coloration while others are extremely purple-colored. Leaves are finely dissected, giving them a ‘fern-like’ appearance and they clasp the stem at the swollen nodes. Flowers are small, white, and held in flat clusters about 3 inches across. Fruits are ridged and flattened, and each fruit holds two seeds. Cow parsnip, Heracleum lanatum: Extremely Toxic Biennial to short lived perennial herbaceous plant from 4-8 feet tall. Rounded green stem has ridges. It has fine white hairs and is 1-2 inches in diameter. Leaves are compound, less deeply incised than hogweed, between 2 -2.5 feet across. Small white flowers are held in flat topped clusters no more than 12 inches across and only 15-30 rays per cluster. Angelica species: About 5 species of Angelica are found in the southeastern United States. Many plants in this family are toxic, so exercise caution when handling it. Angelicas are perennial herbaceous plants which can grow 2-6 feet tall. Smooth stems with no hairs. Small greenish-yellow to greenish-white flowers are held in ROUNDED ball-like clusters. Compound leaves have coarsely-toothed leaflets. Elderberry, Sambucus species: Deciduous shrub growing up to 12 feet tall. Multiple long stems grow from the base arching over at the top. Stems are NOT hollow. Pinnately-compound leaves are opposite and up to 12 inches long. Small white flowers are held in flat topped clusters 10 inches or more across. They bloom from May to July. Berry like fruits are dark purple when mature. STEMS LEAVES FLOWERS Giant Hogweed Identification Guide Heracleum mantegazzianum Giant hogweed leaves are sharply and deeply lobed and up to 5 feet across. It is important to note that seedling’s leaves are much less deeply lobed. Immature fruits Mature fruits and seeds References: All images are from Images.bugwood.org www.illinoiswildflowers.info Front cover - Robert Vidéki, Doronicum Kft.; USDA APHIS PPQ - Oxford, North Carolina , USDA APHIS PPQ. Chart - Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; Leslie J. Mehrhoff, www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers University of Connecticut; Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; plants.ifas.ufl.edu Robert Vidéki, Doronicum Kft.; Karan A. Rawlins, University of Georgia; Karan A. Rawlins, University of Georgia; Chris www.invasive.org Evans, University of Illinois; Karan A. Rawlins, University of Georgia; Pedro Tenorio-Lezama; Eric Coombs, Oregon www.wildflower.org Department of Agriculture; Robert Vidéki, Doronicum Kft.; Pedro Tenorio-Lezama; Ohio State Weed Lab , The Ohio State University; Ohio State Weed Lab , The Ohio State University; Rob Routledge, Sault College; Dave Powell, USDA www.dec.ny.gov/animals/72766.html Forest Service (retired); Mary Ellen (Mel) Harte; Mary Ellen (Mel) Harte; Mary Ellen (Mel) Harte; Mary Ellen (Mel) Harte; James H. Miller, USDA Forest Service; David Stephens; Rebekah D. Wallace, University of Georgia; John Cardina, Citation: Rawlins, K.A., S.J. Swain, C.T The Ohio State University. Bargeron and D.J. Moorhead. Back cover - Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; Leslie J. BW-2018-112. 4 p. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut; Cesar Calderon, USDA APHIS PPQ. JULY 2018.
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  • Reproductive Ecology of Heracleum Mantegazzianum
    4 Reproductive Ecology of Heracleum mantegazzianum IRENA PERGLOVÁ,1 JAN PERGL1 AND PETR PYS˘EK1,2 1Institute of Botany of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Pru˚honice, Czech Republic; 2Charles University, Praha, Czech Republic Botanical creature stirs, seeking revenge (Genesis, 1971) Introduction Reproduction is the most important event in a plant’s life cycle (Crawley, 1997). This is especially true for monocarpic plants, which reproduce only once in their lifetime, as is the case of Heracleum mantegazzianum Sommier & Levier. This species reproduces only by seed; reproduction by vegetative means has never been observed. As in other Apiaceae, H. mantegazzianum has unspecialized flowers, which are promiscuously pollinated by unspecialized pollinators. Many small, closely spaced flowers with exposed nectar make each insect visitor to the inflorescence a potential and probable pollinator (Bell, 1971). A list of insect taxa sampled on H. mantegazzianum (Grace and Nelson, 1981) shows that Coleoptera, Diptera, Hemiptera and Hymenoptera are the most frequent visitors. Heracleum mantegazzianum has an andromonoecious sex habit, as has almost half of British Apiaceae (Lovett-Doust and Lovett-Doust, 1982); together with perfect (hermaphrodite) flowers, umbels bear a variable propor- tion of male (staminate) flowers. The species is considered to be self-compati- ble, which is a typical feature of Apiaceae (Bell, 1971), and protandrous (Grace and Nelson, 1981; Perglová et al., 2006). Protandry is a temporal sep- aration of male and female flowering phases, when stigmas become receptive after the dehiscence of anthers. It is common in umbellifers. Where dichogamy is known, 40% of umbellifers are usually protandrous, compared to only about 11% of all dicotyledons (Lovett-Doust and Lovett-Doust, 1982).
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  • Giant Hogweed (Heracleum Mantegazzianum) Identification and Management Common Name: Giant Hogweed, Giant Cow Parsnip, Cartwheel-Flower
    Dr. Jatinder S. Aulakh Valley Laboratory, Windsor, CT The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station 153 Cook Hill Road, P. O. Box 248 Windsor, CT 06095 Phone: (860) 683-4984 Fax: (860) 683-4987 Founded in 1875 Email: [email protected] Putting science to work for society Website: www.ct.gov/caes Giant Hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) Identification and Management Common name: Giant hogweed, giant cow parsnip, cartwheel-flower. Scientific name: Heracleum mantegazzianum Sommier & Levier. Family name: Apiaceae - Carrot family. Pictures (left to right): Giant Hogweed plant (left) and leaf (right). Picture courtesy: New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. US introduction and distribution: Giant hogweed is native to the southwestern Asia and Caucasus Mountains of Georgia, Azerbaijan, and southern Russia. It was introduced as an ornamental plant in the United States in 1917. It is present in many US states including Connecticut, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Vermont, and Washington. Distribution in Connecticut: Giant hogweed was first reported in Connecticut in 2001. Currently, this federal noxious weed is present in at least 25 towns in all 8 counties (UCONN 2009). 1 Habitat: Giant hogweed prefers moist and fertile soils. It is commonly found growing in vacant lots, floodplain forest, yards or gardens, and along forest edges, roadsides, streams, and riverbanks. Identification: It is an herbaceous biennial or perennial that can grow up to 20 feet in height. Giant hogweed has a main taproot with fibrous lateral roots. Stems are hollow usually covered with hair and reddish-purple blotches. The stem can be 2- to 4-inch in diameter.
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