
Ohio is taking a swing at nature’s bullies.
Under new rules that went into effect Sunday, the sale and distribution of 38 destructive, invasive plant species will become illegal.
In its list, the state agriculture department included various types of honeysuckles, Bradford pear trees, autumn olive shrubs and fig buttercup flowers that line freeways, coat forest floors and choke wild spaces across Ohio.
State officials who already inspect nurseries and garden centers will keep an eye out for the now-prohibited species.
Many of the plants were at some point nursery favorites for desirable qualities such as fast growth, low maintenance and big leaves and flowers — traits that also make them capable of aggressively spreading beyond garden beds to parks and preserves.
Click here to read more from the Columbus Dispatch.
Photo: Honeysuckle (left) by Aftabbanoori; purple loostrife (right) by Ivar Leidos
Get curated news on YOUR industry.
Enter your email to receive our newsletters.Latest from Garden Center
- Boxed in: 2025 Axiom Gardening Outlook Study explores big box vs IGCs
- The Growth Industry Episode 3: Across the Pond with Neville Stein
- Trends: Proven Winners 2025 perennial survey shows strong demand
- Online registration opens for the 2025 Farwest Show
- Sustainabloom launches Wholesale Nickel Program to support floriculture sustainability
- Society of American Florists accepting entries for 2025 Marketer of the Year Contest
- American Horticultural Society welcomes five new board members
- Color Orchids acquires Floricultura Pacific, becoming largest orchid supplier in U.S.