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Bohemian Knotweed
Polygonum x bohemicum
(Buckwheat Family)
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General Description

Bohemian knotweed stand - click for larger imageA class B noxious weed on the WA State noxious weed list, Bohemian knotweed is recommended but not required for control in King County.

The most common invasive knotweed in western Washington, this species is a hybrid between giant and Japanese knotweed and shares characters of both parent species. It was introduced as an ornamental in its own right but has become very widespread in our region, especially along rivers and roadways. This plant spreads mostly by stem and root fragments and is usually found in disturbed areas such as flood zones and roadsides.

Currently, most Bohemian knotweed plants are males and lack seeds. However, more recently, seed-bearing hybrids have appeared, probably indicating a back-cross with giant or Japanese knotweed. The existence of seeding hybrids may mean that this plant will begin to spread even more rapidly in the future.

Bohemian Knotweed Photos

click a thumbnail for a larger image
Bohemian knotweed with seeds - click for larger image Bohemian knotweed flower closeup - click for larger image Bohemian knotweed stand in fall - click for larger image Bohemian knotweed leaves - click for larger image Bohemian knotweed on Soos Creek - click for larger image

Identification

Plants are usually 6.5 to 10 feet tall, shorter in dry areas. Stems are stout, cane-like, hollow between the nodes, somewhat reddish-brown and usually branched. The plants die back above ground at the end of the growing season. However, the dead reddish brown canes often persist throughout the winter. The stem nodes are swollen and surrounded by thin papery sheaths. Leaves can be either spade or heart-shaped, usually more heart-shaped lower down on the stems and more spade-shaped near the branch ends. This variability in leaf shape is one identifying character since the parent species generally have either heart-shaped or spade-shaped leaves. The leaves are also intermediate in texture between the parent species - thicker and rougher than giant knotweed but less so than Japanese knotweed. On flowering stems, leaf tips are characteristically long and gradually tapered.

One key identifying feature is the hairs on the leaf undersiders especially along the midvein. Bohemian knotweed has hairs that are short and broad-based (triangular-shaped), compared with long and wavy in giant knotweed and reduced to barely noticeable bumps in Japanese knotweed. These hairs are easiest to see with a hand lens during the spring and summer, often falling off later in the season.

The flowers are small, creamy white to greenish white, and grow in showy plume-like, branched clusters from leaf axils near the ends of the stems. Flower clusters are generally about the same lenght as the subtending leaf, unlike the shorter flower clusters found on giant knotweed and the longer clusters found on Japanese knotweed. Leaf and flower characters are most reliable when looking near the middle of a branch. The fruit is 3-sided, black and shiny.

For More Information

See our invasive knotweed page for more information on this group of highly invasive, difficult to control species.

Read the Invasive Knotweed Weed Alert for general information on identification and control (1.27 MB Acrobat file) or for comprehensive biology and control information, download the Invasive Knotweed Best Management Practices (281 KB Acrobat file).

For more detailed information on biology and control of knotweed, download a slide show on knotweed biology and control (3.12 MB, Power Point) or see our text-based handout on the subject, Knotweed Biology and Control (44 KB Acrobat file).

Please see the written findings of the WA State Noxious Weed Control Board for more information on Bohemian knotweed.

Information on Bohemian Knotweed identification and distribution is based in large part on the findings reported in PF Zika and A Jacobson's article "An Overlooked Hybrid Japanese Knotweed (Polygonum cuspidatum X sachalinense: Polygonaceae) in North America", published in Rhodora, Vol 105, No 922, pp. 143-152, 2003.


 
Please direct questions & comments regarding noxious weeds to Program Staff, King County Noxious Weed Control Program.

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Water and Land Resources Web Site, please contact Fred Bentler, webmaster.


Department of Natural Resources
Water and Land Resources Division

Updated: March 10, 2008

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