Pretty but Diabolical: Lesser Celandine Carpets the Park.

Lesser Celandine blanketing the forest floor

Lesser Celandine

(Ficaria verna, also known as Fig Buttercup) is a very pretty, but non native invasive plant, originally from Eurasia and northern Africa, that has taken over the Little Falls Spring Valley Park, completely carpeting the valley floor in early spring with a thick green layer dotted with little yellow flowers. In fact, it has already started to come up in the midst of this cold snap. Along with a number of other invasives in our park, lesser celandine is a direct and potent threat to our native plants, especially spring ephemerals, and to our native insects, birds and amphibians, who depend on the native plants. None of them eat celandine.

How do we want Little Falls Park to look in 10 years?

Do we want it covered with a few invasive plants and vines, or do we want the diversity of hundreds of native plants and seedlings, which attract birds, amphibians, reptiles and insects? Because of the Lesser Celandine, we have lost most of the Virginia Bluebells, Wild Ginger, Bloodroot, Trout Lily, Squirrel Corn, Trillium and Spring Beauty (see picture to the right) that used to cover the park in abundance. People who moved to this area many years ago often speak of the masses of Virginia Bluebells in the park as one of the main attractions of this area.  If we want to restore the ecological health and the beauty of Little Falls Park, then we must eliminate Lesser Celandine. 

Controlling Lesser Celandine (More tips HERE).

Lesser Celandine is the first plant you will see appearing in the spring;it spreads quickly, crowds out ephemerals, ferns, and other natives, leeches the soil, and dies back before summer, leaving areas barren looking.  Its multiple bulblets reside up to 6 inches below ground, making manual removal ineffective and destructive to all other plants in the affected area.  If you’ve tried to remove it from your yard, you know that it even displaces grass. No known animals eat it, and no bio-controls are known for it. Chemical control is the only known effective method against Lesser Celandine. There is a very short window in the late winter when it can be controlled, before any native plants have broken ground, and before the Lesser Celandine has flowered.

What Can We Do?

Some other local parks have taken steps to control Lesser Celandine effectively. Rock Creek has combated their celandine problem with spraying and now boast dozens varieties of spring wildflowers including trilliums and hundreds of blue bells in areas that were sprayed.   Sligo Creek also had a celandine problem and been slowly eradicating it in places.  Click here for in depth information which Friends of Sligo Creek (fosc) compiled on the plant, the problem and the solution.  The National Park Service also describes the issues with this plant and the most viable solution (CLICK HERE.) 

Keep Lesser Celandine out of Your Yard.

You can support this effort by removing any Lesser Celandine that crops up in your yards.

spray it:

Glyphosate is the most effective chemical treatment. There is a small window of effectiveness. The temperature must be over 50 degrees and spraying should be done on calm day after the plant has leafed out but before it has fully flowered. 50 percent flowers is ok. You may need to spray for several years to get it all. Care should be taken not to over-spray and kill surrounding plants.

dig it up.

Digging is effective for small patches.

  1. You much dig at least 6 inches down to make sure you get all the bulblets

  2. Throw away the soil. Do not compost it or send it to county with your yard waste. Those bulblet are viable for years.