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Chilean cestrum banner

Common name: Chilean cestrum
Scientific name: Cestrum parqui L’Her.
Other scientific name/s:
Other common name/s: green cestrum, green poison berry

Plant status

Catchment management authority boundaries

Chilean cestrum catchment map
key_brown

Regionally prohibited in the East Gippsland, West Gippsland, Port Phillip and Western Port Catchments

key_beige

Regionally controlled in the Wimmera, Goulburn Broken, North East Catchments

key_white

Restricted in the Mallee, Glenelg Hopkins, North Central and Corangamite Catchments

Read more about the classification of invasive plants in Victoria

Plant images

Chilean cestrum flower Chilean cestrum flower Chilean cestrum plant

 

 

 

 

 

 

Plant biology

Appearance

Shrub (or bush)

Description

Chilean cestrum is an erect shrub that grows to 3 m high.

Stems

Chilean cestrum has whitish young branches and darker woody older stems which are striated at the base. They are mottled nearer the top and one or more stems emerge from each crown of the plant.

Leaves

Older leaves are dark green while younger leaves are light green and alternate along branches.

Leaves have short stalks, are lance-shaped and hairless. They grow up to 12 cm long and 1-2.5 cm wide and their margins undulate.

They have an unpleasant odour when crushed.

Flowers

Chilean cestrum flowers are greenish-yellow, sessile and are borne in loose clusters at the ends of branches. They have tubular corollas of 2.5 cm length with five small terminal lobes.

Flowers have an unpleasant odour by day but are fragrant at night.
Fruit Chilean cestrum fruit are a purplish-to-black, shiny, ovoid berry about 1 cm long. They contain one or two seeds in a dark purple pulp.

Growth and lifecycle

Method of reproduction and disperal

Chilean cestrum reproduces from both creeping roots and seed.

Water is an effective method of dispersal for this plant, as well as birds which eat the fruit and excrete viable seeds.

Dispersal can also occur by pieces of cut root dragged by cultivation equipment. This establishes new plants in clean areas.

Rate of growth and spread

Chilean cestrum is long-lived. The plants are two years old before flowering occurs.

Seedbank propagule persistence

Chilean cestrum can produce more than 2,000 seeds per plant with seeds remaining dormant in the soil for many years.

Preferred habitat

Chilean cestrum prefers warm-temperate and subtropical regions, mainly on alluvial soils along streams. Often promoted as a garden plant, it has become naturalised as a weed in towns and higher rainfall rural areas. It readily invades bushland margins.

The weed is frost-hardy and tolerant to waterlogging.

Distribution

There are only a few occurrences of Chilean cestrum in Victoria, primarily in East Gippsland, Central and North East districts.

Growth calendar

The icons on the calendar below represent the times of year for flowering, seeding, germination, the dormancy period of Chilean cestrum and also the optimum time for treatment.

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Flowering Flowering stage
Flowering stage
Flowering stage
Flowering stage
Flowering stage


Flowering stage
Seeding








Germination

Germination Stage Germination Stage Germination Stage






Dormancy



Dormancy Stage
Dormancy Stage
Dormancy Stage




Treatment




Treatment Stage Treatment Stage Treatment Stage
Treatment Stage

Impact

Impact on ecosystems and waterways

Chilean cestrum prefers moist habitats and invades riparian environments, such as riverbanks and wetlands. The plant grows well on alluvial river flats often to the exclusion of most other vegetation.

The weed forms extensive stands along disturbed areas preventing growth and regeneration by indigenous plants.

Agricultural and economic impacts

Chilean cestrum grows vigorously when neglected and is toxic to animals including cattle, sheep, horses, pigs and poultry.

Animals are attracted to Chilean cestrum and will graze on it.

Infested areas have to be fenced off to prevent stock losses given the toxicity of the plant.

The plant would most likely not become a weed of crop or pastures as it takes several years to mature.

The plant is difficult to control as it grows robustly, reproducing sexually and vegetatively. Presence of this species can affect land value.

Social value and health impacts

Due to its ability to build a large population in moist habitats, Chilean Cestrum has the potential to block access to waterways and affect recreational activities such as swimming, boating and bird watching.

Plant material is poisonous to animals and humans if chewed or swallowed. Humans may also develop skin rashes from handling the plant.

Management

Recommended treatment

  • Application of a registered herbicide
  • Physical removal.

Important information about prescribed measures for the control of noxious weeds

Other management techniques

Cultivation of the soil in which young African boxthorn plants grow may also support its management after implementing the prescribed measures above.

Read more about management and control of invasive plants

References

Muyt, A 2001, Bush invaders of south-east Australia : a guide to the identification and control of environmental weeds found in south-east Australia, RG & FJ Richardson, Victoria.

Parsons, WT & Cuthbertson, EG 1992, Noxious Weeds of Australia, Inkata Press, Melbourne, Sydney.

Department of Primary Industries, Queensland, Green cestrum fact sheet.

Department of Primary Industries, Victoria, Regionally Prohibited Weed Information Sheet - Chilean Cestrum, 2010.