Weeds: Lesser celandine – Ficaria verna
categories: Weeds
revision date: 2022-12-18 12:00
Biology
Lesser celandine is a noxious weed. It is highly variable and has club-shaped, tuberous roots. The weed grows as a mounded rosette with basal and stem leaves and can be 16 inches tall. The leaves are medium to dark green, oblong, heart or triangular in shape and often with a paler underside. The leaf edges can be smooth or have rounded teeth. The flowers are typically yellow with 7-13 petals, about an inch in diameter, and solitary on stem tips.Lesser celandine can reproduce by movement of the tuberous roots or by the bulbils that form in leaf axils. SPECIAL INFORMATION: Lesser celandine can be confused with the native yellow marsh marigold (Caltha palustris). The yellow marsh marigold does not have tuberous roots, produce bulbils, and has only petal-like sepals.
Habitat
Lesser celandine can grow in woodlands, wetlands, along streambanks, in landscaped areas, and along roadsides.
Management Options
Use Integrated Pest Management (IPM) for successful plant problem management.
Non-chemical Management
Select non-chemical management options as your first choice!
- Prevent its introduction. Do not plant lesser celandine or its cultivars.
- Hand dig making certain to remove all plant parts. Bag and dispose of plant parts. Do not compost.
- Do not mow as it can spread the bulbils and seeds.
- Sheet mulch with a thick layer of wood chips (6 inches) to smother plants
Chemical Management
IMPORTANT: Visit Home and Garden Fact Sheets for more information on using pesticides.
- Apply a systemic herbicide in late winter to spring to avoid damaging native herbaceous plants.
Landscape areas
- glyphosate
Turf areas
- No products approved for use in turf.