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Common name: Scotch thistle
Scientific name: Onopordum acanthium L.
Other scientific name/s:
Other common name/s: heraldic thistle

Plant status

Catchment management authority boundaries

Scotch thistle catchment map
key_brown

Regionally prohibited in the North Central, Port Phillip and Western Port Catchments

key_beige

Regionally controlled in the Glenelg Hopkins, Corangamite, Goulburn Broken, North East, West Gippsland and East Gippsland Catchments

key_white

Restricted in the Mallee and Wimmera Catchments

Read more about the classification of invasive plants in Victoria

Plant images

Scotch thistle whole plant Scotch thistle plant Scotch thistle whole plant

 

 

 

 

 

 

Plant biology

Appearance

Herbaceous plant - Forb (flowering herbaceous plant - not a grass)

Description

Scotch thistle is an erect annual or biennial herb growing to 2 m high and reproducing by seed and root pieces.

Stems

Scotch thistle generally has one main stem with numerous branches and broad spiny wings covered with dense woolly hairs, giving a whitish appearance.

Leaves

Leaf margins of Scotch thistle are cut or toothed, spiny and undulating. Dense, white woolly hairs grow on the undersides of leaves and are sometimes sparser on upper sides.

Rosette leaves are stalked and grow up to 40 cm

long. Stem leaves are smaller and without stalks, extending into wings along the stems.

Flowers

Scotch thistle florets are purple or mauve in heads surrounded by numerous spiny bracts (modified leaves at the base of flower). Heads are 2-6 cm in diameter, solitary or in groups towards the ends of the branches.

Bracts are woolly at the base and end in orange spines. Flowers are produced in late spring and summer.
Fruit No Fruit

Seeds

Seeds of Scotch thistle are 4-5 mm long, grey with dark mottling and are attached to a pappus (parachute) of toothed hairs or bristles up to twice as long as the seed.

The pappus is often detached from the seed in the head.

Growth and lifecycle

Method of reproduction and disperal

The major means of dispersal for the Scotch thistle is by seed, but it can also be spread from severed root pieces.

Rate of growth and spread

Scotch thistle seeds can germinate at any time of the year, hence infestations consist of plants of various ages and sizes. There are two main periods of germination; late summer-autumn and late winter-spring.

Seedbank propagule persistence

Scotch thistle is a prolific seeder and a single plant can produce more than 20,000 seeds.

Preferred habitat

Scotch thistle prefers subhumid temperate regions and grows well in soils of moderate to high fertility. The weed is competitive in annual rainfall areas of 500-850 mm. It does not grow well on waterlogged soils.

Growth calendar

The icons on the calendar below represent the times of year for flowering, seeding, germination, the dormancy period of Scotch thistle grass 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
Seeding Seedling Stage Seedling Stage







Seedling Stage
Seedling Stage
Germination
Germination Stage
Germination Stage Germination Stage Germination Stage

Germination Stage
Germination Stage
Germination Stage
Germination Stage

Dormancy










Treatment




Treatment Stage Treatment Stage Treatment Stage
Treatment Stage

Impact

Agricultural and economic impacts

Scotch thistle competes well with pasture resulting in pastures being overrun by this weed. It is not grazed by stock due to its dense spines. Animals rarely eat 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

Parsons, W.T. and Cuthbertson, E.G. 2001, Noxious weeds of Australia, 2nd edn, Inkata Press, Melbourne & Sydney.

Department of Primary Industries, Scotch Thistle Regionally Prohibited Weed Fact Sheet February 2010