Wild Nature Images

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tab 3
Tab 2
Leafy Spurge (Euphorbia esula)
Linnaeus, 1753

 

Synonyms: Esula angustifolia, Esula vulgaris, Euphorbia virgata (see The Plant List for more synonyms)

 

 

 

Euphorbia esula is a spurge native to central and southern Europe, and most of temperate Asia; introduced to North America in the 19th century and presently widespread in the continuous United States and southern Canada. There is some taxonomic uncertainty concerning the North America non-native populations. Many authorities, including the Flora of North America, call them Euphorbia virgata, which is considered a subspecies of E. esula (E. e. subsp. tommasiniana) by The Plant List. Leafy Spurge grows in grasslands, sand dunes, shorelines, pastures, fields, roadsides, and other disturbed areas; 0-2,600 m. This is a perennial herb with rhizomatous root system. The stem is erect, glabrous; 20-110 cm. The leaves are alternate, linear to lanceolate, with entire margins; 3-10 cm long. The flowers are arranged in terminal umbels or cymes of 10-18; lack sepals and petals, but possess a pair of yellowish green bracts. The fruit is a globose capsule. E. esula flowers from mid-spring into September. In North America, Leafy Spurge displaces native vegetation and is considered highly invasive.

 

Leafy Spurge (Euphorbia esula)   D59182
Leafy Spurge
(Euphorbia esula)*
Burnt Lands Provincial Park
Ontario, Canada
Copyright © Michael Patrikeev
All Rights Reserved
     
Leafy Spurge (Euphorbia esula)   D59178
Leafy Spurge
(Euphorbia esula)*
Burnt Lands Provincial Park
Ontario, Canada
Copyright © Michael Patrikeev
All Rights Reserved
* photographed outside of its native range    
     
     
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Copyright © Michael Patrikeev - All Rights Reserved
 
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