Iowa wildflower Wednesday: The despised garlic mustard

Although Bleeding Heartland’s wildflowers series has mostly featured native plants, I rarely feel hostile toward flowering plants that don’t belong in Iowa. Some of these naturalized species, like chicory and moth mullein, tend to stick to disturbed ground. Dame’s rocket can be invasive, but at least it is pretty and serves a lot of pollinators.

I can’t muster the slightest bit of sympathy for garlic mustard (Alliaria petiolata), though.

This European invader can quickly take over high-quality woodland habitats and “has the capacity to crowd out and destroy all of the native wildflowers that bloom during the spring.” It has become widespread across much of the U.S. and Canada.

Garlic mustard’s only redeeming quality is that it is edible–by some accounts, “delicious.” I haven’t cooked with these plants, but I’ve read you can add a few leaves to a salad, saute some with butter or oil, or use large bunches for pesto or a Japanese-style side dish.

May or early June is prime time for trying to eradicate garlic mustard colonies. Pulling out the whole root is difficult later in the summer, when the plants are more developed. The best time to seek and destroy is a day or two after a rainfall, because the roots come out more easily from wet or damp earth.

Garlic mustard grows in a two-year cycle. The Illinois Wildflowers site notes that during the first year, “it consists of a small rosette of leaves.” You may see just a few of these leaves scattered in a wooded area:

Or they may look like a carpet.

Garlic mustard stays close to the ground in the first year but typically grows taller the second year, when flowers appear. This plant is budding.

The flowers have four petals, which is often a clue to European origin. Many wildflowers native to North America have five petals. On the taller plants, you may notice rounded leaves near the base and narrower, pointed leaves higher up near the flowers.

Within a few weeks, “The flowers are replaced by narrow seedpods that are called ‘siliques.’ These seedpods are about 1½–2″ long and narrowly cylindrical (although slightly 4-angled in circumference).” Seed pods are developing on the plants in the next few pictures.

To get rid of garlic mustard, you must pull out the whole root. New shoots will grow if you only break or cut the stems. In my experience, it helps to grip the plant as close to the base as possible and pull gently rather than yanking. It’s tricky, because the root often takes a sharp turn underground and appears to grow at a right angle to the stem.

I’d heard garlic mustard plants can’t be left on the ground after pulling up, but must be thrown away. Four years ago, I confirmed the conventional wisdom was accurate. Having run out of garbage bags, I left some armfuls of garlic mustard on the porch until I could get to the store. A few days later, I realized some plants were growing out of the pile.

I replicated the experiment this year. Sure enough, some of the plants I left lying on the driveway seemed determined to flower and spread their seed.

A week or so ago, I was stunned to see a zombie garlic mustard plant growing out of a garbage bag I had set aside but not tied shut.

All of the garlic mustard plants in the next few shots were ripped out of the ground seconds after I put my camera away. With Virginia bluebells in the background:

With Jack-in-the-pulpits:

Growing in a patch of wild ginger:

Growing through the lobed leaves of May apples/umbrella plants:

Be careful when you are getting rid of garlic mustard. Poison ivy also thrives in shady wooded habitats. For that reason, I lacked the courage to go after this large plant.

Tags: Wildflowers

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Laura Belin

  • Thank you for this post

    You heroic Iowans who regularly pull GM deserve far more profuse thanks from the rest of us than you will ever get. (I feel guilty for not helping — my excuse is being busy killing Asian honeysuckle and crown vetch.) Iowa has many awful invasive plants, but garlic mustard is one of the very worst. I wonder if service clubs and youth groups could be more encouraged to help.

    The high deer populations in some parts of Iowa add to the problem because the GM seeds travel to new locations on deer fur and feet. Deer also eat native wildflowers and avoid eating GM, making GM invasions easier.

    • I should do more about honeysuckle

      There’s quite a bit of it around me. I don’t know where or how to begin.

      We notice a lot of garlic mustard growing near deer trails in our area. They are certainly tracking in the seeds.

      Chris Jones speculated that the right-angle roots on garlic mustard may be an adaptation to grazing. Do you know whether European animals eat it?

      • .Apparently goats just love garlic mustard...

        …so in Michigan, goats are being used to control it. Of course as pointed out in your post, the GM can and will resprout. But the idea seems to be that the goats eat down heavy patches of GM before they can go to seed so the patches won’t get bigger, and there is also lots of human pulling. I’ve read that in northern Michigan, some GM infestations have been greatly reduced, hard to believe.

        As for honeysuckle, I read that the DNR is so desperate that cropdusters are applying foliar herbicide specific to woody plants on some huge honeysuckle infestations that are taking over southern Iowa grasslands. There are of course some very nice native woodies (leadplant, Iowa crabapple, etc.) that are found on Iowa prairies. But given the giant honeysuckle problems the DNR is facing, with not nearly enough money, I just hope their approach will work.

        The approaches I know about for less dramatic honeysuckle problems are cutting and stump-treating, prescribed fire, forestry-mowing, goats, and combinations thereof. I’ve tried all except goats, with mixed success. After consulting experts, I hope to try forestry mowing and more frequent fire on the worst acres. But on some other acres, cutting and treating has worked better. Sorry, very long reply!

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