Pacific Island Ecosystems at Risk (PIER)

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Baccharis halimifolia
L., Asteraceae
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Present on Pacific Islands?  no

Primarily a threat at high elevations?  no

Risk assessment results:  Reject, score: 19 (Go to the risk assessment)

Common name(s): [more details]

English: Sea Island myrtle, consumption-weed, eastern baccharis, groundsel bush, groundsel tree, sea-myrtle, tree groundsel, waterbrush

Habit:  shrub

Description: 

Genus:  "Dioecious, sometimes evergreen shrubs, in North and South America; leaves alternate, sometimes lacking; flower heads small, discoid, in panicles; flowers all rubular, white or yellowish; achenes 4-10-nerved, pappus of white capillary bristles, many in the female flowers, few in the male" (Bailey & Bailey, 1976; p. 133).

Species:  "A branching glabrous shrub to about  3 m tall; branchlets angled, sometimes minutely scurfy.  Leaves with somewhat margined petioles to about 1 cm long; blades obovate to elliptic or oblanceolate, those of the stem and lower branches 2-7 cm long and 1-5 cm wide, those of the branchlets smaller, cuneate at base, obtuse to acute at apex, glandular-dotted, typically coarsely several-toothed above the middle.  Heads white, in terminal or axillary clusters of 1 to 5, those of the staminate plant nearly globose when young.  Involucres campanulate, 4-6 mm high. Phyllaries imbricated in several series, glutinous, the outer ones ovate-elliptic and obtuse, the inner ones of the pistillate heads lanceolate and acute to acuminate.  Achenes about 1.5 mm long; pappus bright-white, 6-8 mm long, noticeable exceeding the involucre" (Correll & Correll, 1982; p. 1456).

Habitat/ecology:  "Coastal marshes... Resistant to salt spray..." (Bailey & Bailey, 1976; p. 133).  "In open marshes, coppices and on open gravelly flats and in palm flats" (Correll & Correll, 1982; p. 1456).  "Coastal swamps, coastal forests, disturbed places.  In the native range, this shrub is found mostly in coastal habitats, e.g. salt marshes and tidal rivers, sandy places, but also on disturbed places far off the coast.  In the cooler parts within the native range, the shrub is deciduous. The shrub tolerates a high level of soil salinity"  (Weber, 2003; p. 65).

Propagation:  Seed, dispersed by wind and water (Weber, 2003; p. 65).

Native range:  US, Central America (Bailey & Bailey, 1976; p. 133).  "Eastern and southeastern United States, and the West Indies" (Correll & Correll, 1982; p. 1456).

Presence:

Pacific Rim
Country/Terr./St. &
Island group
Location Cited status &
Cited as invasive &
Cited as cultivated &
Cited as aboriginal introduction?
Reference &
Comments
Australia
Australia (continental)
Australia (continental)   Parsons, W. T./Cuthbertson, E. G. (1992)
Australia
Australia (continental)
Queensland introduced
invasive
Queensland Herbarium (2002) (p. 1)
Mexico
Mexico
Mexico (United Mexican States) native
Weber, Ewald (2003) (p. 65)
New Zealand
New Zealand
New Zealand (country) introduced
invasive
cultivated
Webb, C. J./Sykes, W. R./Garnock-Jones, P. J. (1988) (p. 182)
"Open hillsides, rock crevices and waste places".
Also reported from
Country/Terr./St. &
Island group
Location Cited status &
Cited as invasive &
Cited as cultivated &
Cited as aboriginal introduction?
Reference &
Comments
Canada
Canada
Canada native
U.S. Dept. Agr., Agr. Res. Serv. (2013)
Nova Scotia
United States (continental except west coast)
United States (other states)
United States (other states) native
U.S. Dept. Agr., Agr. Res. Serv. (2013)
United States (continental except west coast)
United States (other states)
USA (Florida) native
U.S. Dept. Agr., Agr. Res. Serv. (2013)

Control: 

Physical:  "If plants are removed manually, the roots should be cut well below the surface to prevent resprouting.

Chemical:  "Chemical control is done by spraying herbicides containing 2,4-D, dicamba plus MCPA, glyphosate, or picloram plus 2,4-D"  (Weber, 2003; p. 65).


Need more info? Have questions? Comments? Information to contribute? Contact PIER! (pier@hear.org)

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This page was created on 1 JAN 2004 and was last updated on 5 DEC 2010.