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Japanese Honeysuckle
Pest of the Week
BY: Elizabeth Noll
There’s no denying that Japanese honeysuckle is charming, with its vanilla and cream blossoms, its intense perfume, and its habit of draping itself attractively over arbors and fences. But this beauty is also a beast. Japanese honeysuckle (Lonicera japonica) and its cultivars, including Hall’s honeysuckle (L. japonica ‘Halliana’, pictured here) are extremely invasive across most of the United States and parts of Canada.
Damage
This aggressive perennial vine and ground cover, which is evergreen in the south and mid-Atlantic regions, has invaded woodlands, wetlands, and meadows in all but a handful of U.S. states. It threatens native plants as well as the wildlife that depends on those plants. Japanese honeysuckle chokes saplings and shrubs by girdling trunks, and forms dense mats that kill other plants by blocking sunlight. It spreads by roots, seeds (which are carried for miles when birds eat the berries), and runners (stems that root where a leaf node touches the ground).
Control
Don’t plant Japanese honeysuckle (the species or any cultivar). If you have one and you’re determined to keep it, cut or mow it each year before it sets seed and keep it well away from trees and shrubs. To remove a small vine, pull it out by hand, making sure to get all pieces of the root. To remove large patches, mow at least twice a year (in July and September) and use a systemic herbicide that contains the active ingredients glyphosate or triclopyr. Be careful not to splash the herbicide on nearby plants.
Alternative
Replace your beast with trumpet honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens), a beautiful native vine with coral flowers loved by hummingbirds and butterflies.
—Photo courtesy of the Kemper Center for Home Gardening at the Missouri Botanical Garden
Comments
By
gispa30
Thursday, January 27, 2011 9:11 AM
No, watch out for the trumpet vine as well. Even though it is native, it tends to pop up everywhere and has roots going to China. Rather plant Lonicera sempervirens, also a native vine with lovely red flowers or some of the good cultivars of honeysuckle. In Virginia I had lonicera heckrottii and I never even could get a baby from it and it is fragrant mornings and evenings. I now have a Mandarin honeysuckle and don't think it is invasive.
By
meandde
Monday, February 07, 2011 9:25 AM
what about purple leaf honey suckle, is that invasive?
By
meandde
Monday, February 07, 2011 9:25 AM
what about purple leaf honey suckle, is that invasive?
By
nanswf
Monday, February 07, 2011 9:30 PM
I have been including Japanese Honeysuckle in my salads from Spring to fall for the last two years. Please don't poison it! Harvest it! Also which of these other varieties are edible?
By
laurenm
Wednesday, February 09, 2011 4:53 PM
I agree with gispa30 comment earlier. Trumpet Vine can be a real hassle with "volunteer shoots" coming up several yards away from the mother plant. I planted one 20 years ago. I pulled up the mother plant 5 years later because of too many volunteer shoots. Guess what, I'm still trying to treat new volunteer shoots with brush killer and I haven't eradicated the plant from my yard yet.
By
twister
Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:14 AM
I had no idea that the japanese honeysuckle was edible! I've had some growing on my fence for at least 10 years, and it has never spread, popped up or volunteered anywhere. I'm in zone 8-9. Maybe I am in one of those "handful of american states" that doesn't seem to have a problem with it.
By
laurenm
Thursday, March 10, 2011 9:52 AM
Just don't confuse the two plants. Japanese Honeysuckle may be edible and may be more behaved by staying in its place. Trumpet Vine -Lonicera sempervirens, will volunteer in places you may not have intended and it is hard to keep it under control.
By
crine
Tuesday, April 05, 2011 4:31 PM
Oh, I really agree about the trumpet hummingbird vine. I love to grow it for the birds, of course. But it gets so huge, and runs roots underground. It has taken over my lattice under the deck, and we keep mowing it off with the grass, out in the open yard.
By
dbachor
Sunday, May 15, 2011 5:23 PM
I have mini hollyhock bushes. I just found some brownish/orange looking spots on them. I do not know if it is a fungus, a spore. or eggs. They are only on the back side of the leaves. Is there a home remedy? Debra
By
meh00763
Wednesday, May 23, 2012 8:26 PM
I love my Japanese Honeysuckl. It came with my house,smells great,and covers an ugly fence that hides my compost. I keep it under control by trimming it every spring.
By
guinnevtra
Saturday, June 30, 2012 8:03 PM
When I first moved into my rental, we had a vine growing inside the house from the floor furnaces, in through the windows, and along the foundations of the house. We tore it out, and ran it through the wood chipper. Needless to say, we now have it EVERYWHERE!!! Two years later, I have just discovered that it is the orange trumpet vine. You can't mow the backyard, it is growing so thick! We cut it all down every two weeks or so, and it keeps coming back, and you can only dig so deep before you get tired of chasing roots. The vine is my bane, and is impeding the growth of my hummingbird vine!
By
snickers50501
Tuesday, August 14, 2012 12:22 PM
I have had my own share of woes with orange trumpet vine. It would creep under my house siding. You can only dig so deep and it never seems deep enough to destroy it. I was happy to move away and leave this headache to the new owners. Far FAR from my new house I planted the vines (4) again along a fenceline but in yellow. Is this variety less invasive? I had a heck of time getting it established unlike the orange that grows like a weed. This is the 3rd summer and I have yet to see one bloom on any of them. The plants are all healthy but slow growing.
By
meandde
Tuesday, August 14, 2012 12:53 PM
orange trumpet vine is different from the orange honeysuckle Lonicera sempervirens( which is native here ) , the trumpet vine is extremely invasive, i see it on the roadsides choking trees, have not had a problem with the native honeysuckle though, still waiting for a flower on the purple/ japanese ( think it was labeled wrong) never had a flower, must have planted it at least 3 years ago, and it hasn't taken over in houston, maybe the heat and drought keeps it tame
By
likubles
Thursday, September 20, 2012 10:10 AM
I had a Trumpet Vine. Was a gift, it was so beautiful with red trumpet flowers. I live in Ohio and actually attracted Hummingbirds that were so awsome to watch, but then I noticed Green plants popping up everywhere I never planted. I tried pulling them out and it was madness as they don't just pull out. I learned my Trumpet vines was growing twins then triplets and so on. I pulled main plant, but still have left over twins and triplets. Our house was also damaged as it grew into the gutters and ripped them from the house. Sorry Hummingbirds, but no more Trumpet Vine. How I kill the other roots is Poison Ivy Killer Spray. (Tip)
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