By Kate Yturri, Judy Winer and Gwen Stamm, WSU Master Gardener’s Course graduates
Invasive Plant Species/Noxious Weed Alert – Please look for Spurge Laurel on your property and in the community. It is a shade tolerant shrub, typically 2 to 4 ft. tall, with shiny smooth evergreen leaves that are lighter in color underneath and are alternately arranged in dense spirals near the ends of the branches. The light greenish yellow flowers are clustered at the base of the leaves and bloom between March and May. Fruits are little oval black berries with one seed and are poisonous. Spurge Laurel has been spotted on all the main islands as well as many of the smaller ones, in forest understories and at private residences. The black berries and sap are toxic to humans, livestock, dogs and cats. The plant is native to Europe and North Africa and is rapidly naturalizing throughout San Juan County, shading out natives and suppressing forest regeneration. It is considered a serious threat to Garry oak woodlands and dry madrone/Douglas fir forests in the San Juan Islands and coastal British Columbia. The plant reproduces through seeds, often spread by birds and rodents and through production of root sprouts. Spurge Laurel may be confused with English or Portugal laurel, Pieris, azaleas, or immature rhododendrons but may be distinguished by the densely whorled flowers cluster near the top of the stem.
Hand pulling small plants is effective. Wear gloves and protective gear when handling Spurge Laurel due to the toxins in the sap, stem, leaves and fruits. Larger shrubs can be pulled with a weed wench, treated with a selective herbicide or cut below the soil line. Herbicide applied to the cut stump prevents re-sprouting.
Spurge Laurel is a CLASS B Noxious Weed and is designated for control in San Juan County.
Don’t Do It This Way!
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Thank you for getting the word out about this noxious weed. In the island community in which I live, there are residents from at least three different countries, and several states of the union. Would it be possible for the master gardener authors to also use the international language of plant enthusiasts, the scientific name. In this case, the weed has at least seven different common names. It is much easier to remember one; Daphne laureola. Thanks for keeping us informed.