News

Invasive species can significantly damage the ecosystem. Homeowner shares jaw-dropping transformation after ripping out ...
Honeysuckle is deceptive: It looks pretty, smells sweet... and slowly kills all the plants around it. To be more specific, I'm talking about Japanese honeysuckle and bush honeysuckle. They're ...
The forest cleanup will likely have significant effects. Nature center shares uplifting before-and-after photos after taking ...
Three of the most notorious offenders in Southwest Ohio are garlic mustard, amur honeysuckle, and Bradford (calleary) pear. Making Way The first step in welcoming natives is evicting the squatters.
Chinese privet, Chinese tallow, Japanese honeysuckle, Japanese climbing fern, water hyacinth, and giant salvinia are among the worst offenders in East Texas. Dr. Doug Tallamy, professor of ...
wetlands taken over by purple loosestrife or fields ringed by Japanese honeysuckle. Thanks to new research from a pair of ecologists, we now have a detailed sense of which plant characteristics ...
Those nasty trees that smell like rotting fish can no longer be bought, sold, or distributed by Missouri plant nurseries ...
The Missouri legislature approved a law that would ban the sale of multiple invasive plants, including burning bush and ...
Notable aggressive species include Old World climbing fern, skunk vine, Japanese honeysuckle, English ivy, Asiatic jasmine, creeping fig, Chinese wisteria, cat’s claw, air potato, and kudzu ...
Our wildflower for today is so common that it borders on being a pest. Japanese honeysuckle is a relentless climber. Once it gets started, it climbs a fence, a shrub, a tree, a rusty abandoned ...
Sales of climbing euonymus (Euonymus fortunei), Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica), sericea lespedeza (Lespedeza cuneata) and perilla mint (Perilla frutescens) would be barred starting Jan ...
“Some species of honeysuckle shrubs and vines are extremely invasive in the Midwest,” said Spencer Campbell, Plant Clinic manager at The Morton Arboretum in Lisle. “They’ve escaped from ...