Most of the plants used in gardens and landscaping do not invade or harm wildland areas. But a few species can – and do – escape from cultivated areas into open landscapes and cause a variety of ecological problems. They crowd out native plants, insects and animals, and can lead to flooding, fire and crop losses. Invasive species are a leading threat to biodiversity, second only to habitat destruction. And the economic cost is as significant as the ecological cost. In
How can the horticulture industry simultaneously serve its customers, protect wildlife and wildlands and save Californians millions of dollars? By stopping the spread of invasive plants. Industry leaders are participating in an initiative called California Horticultural Invasives Prevention (Cal-HIP) to halt introductions of invasive plants – which damage local ecosystems and are expensive to control or remove once they take hold.
Cal-HIP members are devising ways to voluntarily avoid growing, selling or promoting problem plants. Through the PlantRight campaign, the group is educating horticultural businesses about the problem and the ways they can transition to noninvasive plant material. After a year and a half of focusing on industry education, the PlantRight campaign is preparing to launch a public education effort to engage gardeners in preventing the spread of invasive plants. By timing the outreach effort in this fashion, the increase in consumer demand for noninvasive plant material will come as a support to
Catalyst for change
Sustainable Conservation manages this Cal-HIP program. It is an independent nonprofit organization based in
Sustainable Conservation also raises funds to support the program. Funding includes grants from philanthropic groups like the Seaver Institute, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Annenberg Foundation and the Ahmanson Foundation.
Diversity counts
Since 2004, Cal-HIP has brought together leaders from all sectors of the horticulture industry with environmental groups, public gardens and arboreta, scientists and government agencies to collaborate and determine which invasive plants pose the greatest threats to each region.
Cal-HIP bases decisions on credible scientific research.
California Association of Nurseries and
{sidebar id=2}
- Terri Kempton
Terri Kempton is project manager of
A glance at the list
Cal-HIP reviewed plant species in the nursery causing invasive problems in the state. The group spent months analyzing data, visiting invasion sites, talking with experts and promoting research to answer remaining questions. The result is a realistic list of the top invasive species that can be prevented by removing them from the trade and replacing them with safer alternatives. Here is an abbreviated list of the plants in each region. Look at the full list on www.plantright.org.
|
Invasive |
Alternatives |
|
SIERRA AND COASTAL MOUNTAINS | |
|
Arundo donax¸ giant reed |
Phormium tenax,
|
|
Cytisus scoparius, Cytisus striatus, Genista monspessulana, Retama monosperma, Spartium junceum, brooms |
Forsythia |
| |
Potentilla fruticosa, shrubby cinquefoil |
| |
Euryops pectinatus, Yellow bush daisy |
|
Pennisetum setaceum, green fountain grass |
Helictotrichon sempervirens, blue oat grass |
| |
Carex, sedge |
|
Periwinkle |
Geranium ‘Rozanne’ |
| |
Campanula poscharskyana |
|
| |
|
Eucalyptus globulous, blue gum eucalyptus |
Taxodium distichum, bald cypress |
|
Sapium sebiferum, Chinese tallow tree |
Pistacia chinensis, Chinese pistache |
| |
Liquidambar styraciflua, sweet gum |
| |
Acer rubrum ‘October Glory,’ red maple ‘October Glory’ |
|
NORTH AND
| |
|
Arctotheca calendula, cape weed |
Arctotis, African daisy |
| |
Arctostaphylos spp., Manzanita |
|
Mesembryanthemum crystallinum, Carpobrotus edulis, iceplant |
Fragaria chiloensis, beach strawberry |
| |
Delosperma cooperi, non-invasive iceplant |
|
Tamarix ramosissoma, salt cedar |
Cercis occidentalis, Western redbud |
|
| |
|
Cortaderia jubata and C. selloana, pampas grass |
Muhlenbergia rigens, deer grass |
| |
Muhlenbergia capillaries, pink muhly grass |
|
DESERT | |
|
Elaeagnus angustifolia, Russian olive |
Cupressus arizonica,
|
| |
Chilopsis linearis, desert catalpa |
Latest from Greenhouse Management
- Voting now open for the National Garden Bureau's 2026 Green Thumb Award Winners
- WUR extends Gerben Messelink’s professorship in biological pest control in partnership with Biobest and Interpolis
- Lights, CO2, GROW!
- Leading the next generation
- The Growth Industry Episode 8: From NFL guard to expert gardener with Chuck Hutchison
- The biggest greenhouse headlines of 2025
- Theresa Specht
- 10 building blocks of plant health