Bur buttercup

Also called Curveseed Butterwort. Spread aggressively. When the seed pod dries out and hardens, it becomes spiky and sticks like a velcro.

Life cycle

They are annuals and reseed quickly.

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Hazard

It’s highly toxic to animals.

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Control

How to get rid of them?

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Prevention

How to prevent those suckers from coming out in spring?

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Life cycle

They are annuals and reseed quickly.

Learn more

Control

How to get rid of them?

Learn more

Hazard

It’s highly toxic to animals.

Learn more

Prevention

How to prevent those suckers from coming out in spring?

Learn more

Life cycle

They are annual: germinate in early spring and have beautiful yellow flowers. Each seed pod can generate 5-80 seeds.

Soft short foliage emerges in Feburary.

Small yellow flowers come out around March.

Bur (seed pod) comes out right after flowers… they are very prolific.

When it’s dried and hardened, it will fall on the ground and easily stick on your shoes, socks or animal’s fur. 

Hazard

Bur buttercup is considered highly toxic and livestock can be poisoned (anorexia, labored breathing, diarrhea) and die from digesting it. It also can affect humans by irritating skin and causing blisters.

What is the toxic chemical?

The plant contains ranunculin, which turns into a toxic compound protoanemonin when the plant is crushed

 

How do you get rid of bur buttercup?

The next section we’ll explain the common methods.

Control

They only grow 3-4″ and produce massive amounts of seeds. Very easy to pull by hand or rake before it goes seeded. If the seeds already go in the ground, consider a big scale of physical or chemical removal methods.

Solarization

It utilizes the penetrated sunlight to heat up the ground to 140°F with moisture to “cook” the weeds, seeds, pathogens, etc. Get a sheet of clear plastic tarp (>2 mil), moist the ground, cover it and secure the sides with dirt or rocks.

Cardboard method

1. We removed the topsoil with millions of dry mature bur buttercups. (We dumped it in big black garbage bags, moist it with water and let it “cook”. Use the soil after a few months.)

2. Cover the ground with cardboard. Cut some holes where we want to put plants in.

3. Mulch it with woodchips ~3″

Prevention

Catch them early in spring to prevent your garden get completely destroyed. 

Pre-emergent spray

Apply chemical spray before it sprouts (late winter/early spring)

Early control

Identify it when the infestation is small and remove it before it goes seeded. 

Mulch it heavily

They are annuals that propagate through seeds so mulching 3″ help new seeds contacting the soil.