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The berries of Japanese Honeysuckle are attractive to birds, including native fruit-eating birds like the Pied Currawong and the Silvereye, and birds play a significant role in the spread of this plant into bushland areas. So too do we humans - far too many people still use the bush verges as convenient dumping grounds for their garden waste. If a plant is a problem in the garden, it will be a even bigger problem in the bush, where the gardener is not around to keep it under control. Japanese Honeysuckle is a perfect case in point: cuttings in contact with the ground will layer (grow roots), and soon a new plant is growing. Once established, Japanese Honeysuckle does not need birds to help it spread: its long stems also layer, sending down roots at the swollen woody leaf nodes.
Here Japanese Honeysuckle has blanketed the vegetation below a road drain in moist forest. Bushcare volunteers removing it have uncovered old waste dumping - and mature tree ferns.
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The Beauty is a Beast The greatest impact of Japanese Honeysuckle in bushland is on shrubs and low canopy trees, over which it may quickly form a complete blanket, blocking light to the plants which support it. Its sheer weight can cause branch or canopy collapse. Can it kill trees? Yes indeed. The dense growth blocks light to the leaves, and restricts the tree's ability to photosynthesise. The conditions of darkness, warmth, moisture and poor air circulation under the vine can lead to deadly fungal infections of the bark. The tree may eventually die, but not the honeysuckle, which will still be triumphantly holding its head in the sun and continuing its rampant growth. | |
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Large infestations of Japanese Honeysuckle can often be removed by raking and rolling it up like a carpet. Regrowth can be sprayed. Japanese Honeysuckle can be dug out, but this can be an arduous task, as it will reshoot energetically from any roots left in the ground unless these are poisoned. Poison roots with herbicide using the cut and paint or scrape and paint techniques described on this website, and in the free booklet Weeds of Blue Mountains Bushland. | |
Go Native! It is not too difficult to suggest alternatives for Japanese Honeysuckle. A fast growing and showy ornamental creeper that won't go bush is the Potato Vine (Solanum jasminoides), or if you have a sheltered spot, the Chinese Star Jasmine (Trachelospermum jasminoides) gives you a perfumed alternative. But why not go native, and have many more birds come to your garden for their food! A vigorous creeper (many less vigorous cultivars are available) is the Wonga Wonga vine (Pandorea pandorana); somewhat more delicate are the native clematis, Old Man's Beard (Clematis aristata), the Bluebell Creeper (Sollya heterophylla), and the scrambler Purple Twining-pea (Hardenbergia violacea). All are evergreen, and stunningly beautiful in flower. (Keep an eye on the Bluebell Creeper, however: this Western Australian has become weedy in some areas.) | |


Japanese Honeysuckle prefers to grow in moist but well-drained fertile areas, especially around creeks and road drains affected by urban runoff. However, like any successful weed it is not too fastidious, and is often found growing on roadsides and at bushland edges, and on disturbed sites - perhaps where the native vegetation has been buried under garden wastes, or where soil from another site may have been introduced.

