Florida Exotic Pest Plant Council's
2005
List of Invasive Species
Purpose of the List: To focus attention on --
Ø the adverse effects exotic pest plants have on Florida's biodiversity and plant communities,
Ø the habitat losses from exotic pest plant infestations,
Ø the impacts on endangered species via habitat loss and alteration,
Ø the need to prevent habitat losses through pest-plant management,
Ø the socio-economic impacts of these plants (e.g., increased wildfires in certain areas),
Ø changes in the seriousness of different pest plants over time,
Ø the need to provide information that helps managers set priorities for control programs.

DEFINITIONS: Exotic—a
species introduced to Florida, purposefully or accidentally, from a natural
range outside of Florida. Native—a species whose natural range included
Florida at the time of European contact (1500 AD). Naturalized exotic—an
exotic that sustains itself outside cultivation (it is still exotic; it has not
"become" native). Invasive exotic—an exotic that not only has
naturalized but is expanding on its own in Florida plant communities.
Abbreviations used:
for "Gov. list": P = Prohibited by Fla. Dept. of Environmental Protection, N = Noxious weed listed by Fla. Dept. of Agriculture & Consumer Services, U = Noxious weed listed by U.S. Department of Agriculture.
for "Reg. Dis.": N = north, C = central, S = south, referring to each species' current distribution in general regions of Florida (not its potential range in the state). See following map.
For additional information on distributions of particular species by county, visit the University of South Florida’s Atlas of Florida Vascular Plants web site, www.plantatlas.usf.edu. Many of those species entries also have habit and close-up pictures of the species.
Additional images for some species may be found at the “Introduced Species” page on the Univ. of Florida Herbarium website, at Fairchild Tropical Garden’s Virtual Herbarium, and the Godfrey Herbarium database, Florida State University.
For other additional information on plants included in this list, see related links and pages at this web site on the home page menu.
Category I - Invasive exotics that are altering native plant communities by displacing native species, changing community structures or ecological functions, or hybridizing with natives. This definition does not rely on the economic severity or geographic range of the problem, but on the documented ecological damage caused.
|
Scientific Name |
Common Name |
EPPC Cat. |
Gov. list |
Reg. Dist. |
|
rosary pea |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
earleaf acacia |
I |
|
S |
|
|
mimosa, silk tree |
I |
|
N, C |
|
|
woman's tongue |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
Ardisia crenata (= A. crenulata ) |
coral ardisia |
I |
|
N, C |
|
Ardisia elliptica (=A. humilis) |
shoebutton ardisia |
I |
|
S |
|
Asparagus aethiopicus (= A. sprengeri; A. densiflorus misapplied) |
asparagus-fern |
I |
|
C, S |
|
orchid tree |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
bischofia |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
(=C. calaba; C. inophyllum misapplied) |
santa maria (names "mast wood," "Alexandrian laurel" used in cultivation) |
I |
|
S |
|
Australian pine |
I |
P |
N,C,S |
|
|
suckering Australian pine |
I |
P |
C, S |
|
|
camphor-tree |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
wild taro |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
lather leaf |
I |
|
S |
|
|
carrotwood |
I |
N |
C, S |
|
|
winged yam |
I |
N |
N,C,S |
|
|
air-potato |
I |
N |
N,C,S |
|
|
water-hyacinth |
I |
P |
N,C,S |
|
|
Surinam cherry |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
Ficus microcarpa (F. nitida and F. retusa var. nitida misapplied) |
laurel fig |
I |
|
C, S |
|
hydrilla |
I |
P, U |
N,C,S |
|
|
green hygro |
I |
P, U |
N,C,S |
|
|
West Indian marsh grass |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
brasiliensis misapplied) |
cogon grass |
I |
N, U |
N, C, S |
|
waterspinach |
I |
P, U |
C |
|
|
Gold Coast jasmine |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
Brazilian jasmine |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
lantana, shrub verbena |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
glossy privet |
I |
|
N, C |
|
|
Chinese privet, hedge privet |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
Japanese honeysuckle |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
Japanese climbing fern |
I |
N |
N,C, S |
|
|
Old World climbing fern |
I |
N |
C, S |
|
|
cat's claw vine |
I |
|
N,C, S |
|
|
sapodilla |
I |
|
S |
|
|
melaleuca, paper bark |
I |
P, N, U |
C, S |
|
|
catclaw mimosa |
I |
P, N, U |
C, S |
|
|
nandina, heavenly bamboo |
I |
|
N, C |
|
|
sword fern |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
Asian sword fern |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
Burma reed, cane grass |
I |
N |
S |
|
|
sewer vine, onion vine |
I |
N |
S |
|
|
skunk vine |
I |
N |
N,C |
|
|
torpedo grass |
I |
|
N,C,S |
|
|
Napier grass |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
waterlettuce |
I |
P |
N,C,S |
|
|
(=P. littorale) |
strawberry guava |
I |
|
C, S |
|
guava |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
Pueraria montana var. lobata (=P. lobata) |
kudzu |
I |
N, U |
N,C, S |
|
downy rose-myrtle |
I |
N |
C, S |
|
|
Rhoeo spathacea (see Tradescantia spathacea) |
|
|
|
|
|
Natal grass |
I |
|
N, C, S |
|
|
R. brittoniana) |
Mexican petunia |
I |
|
N, C, S |
|
Sapium sebiferum (= Triadeca sebifera) |
popcorn tree, Chinese tallow tree |
I |
N |
N, C, S |
|
(=Scaevola sericea, S. frutescens) |
scaevola, half-flower, beach naupaka |
I |
|
C, S |
|
Schefflera actinophylla (=Brassaia actinophylla) |
schefflera, Queensland umbrella tree |
I |
|
C, S |
|
Brazilian pepper |
I |
P, N |
N, C, S |
|
|
Senna pendula var. glabrata (=Cassia coluteoides) |
climbing cassia, Christmas cassia, Christmas senna |
I |
|
C, S |
|
(=S. houstonii) |
wetland night shade, aquatic soda apple |
I |
N, U |
C, S |
|
tropical soda apple |
I |
N, U |
N, C, S |
|
|
arrowhead vine |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
jambolan, Java plum |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
incised halberd fern |
I |
|
S |
|
|
seaside mahoe |
I |
|
C, S |
|
|
white-flowered wandering jew |
I |
|
N, C |
|
|
(= Rhoeo spathacea, Rhoeo discolor) |
oyster plant |
I |
|
S |
|
Urochloa mutica ( = Brachiaria mutica) |
Pará grass |
I |
|
C, S |
Category II - Invasive exotics that have increased in abundance or frequency but have not yet altered Florida plant communities to the extent shown by Category I species. These species may become ranked Category I, if ecological damage is demonstrated.
|
Scientific Name |
Common Name |
EPPC Cat. |
Gov. list |
Reg. Dist. |
|
|
red sandalwood |
II |
|
S |
||
|
Agave sisalana |
sisal hemp |
II |
|
C, S |
|
|
Aleurites fordii (= Vernicia fordii) |
tung oil tree |
II |
|
N, C |
|
|
Alstonia macrophylla |
devil-tree |
II |
|
S |
|
|
Alternanthera philoxeroides |
alligator weed |
II |
P |
N, C, S |
|
|
Antigonon leptopus |
coral vine |
II |
|
N, C, S |
|
|
Aristolochia littoralis |
calico flower |
II |
|
N, C |
|
|
Asystasia gangetica |
Ganges primrose |
II |
|
C, S |
|
|
Begonia cucullata |
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