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Scientific Name
Synonyms
Family
Common Names
Origin
Cultivation
Naturalised Distribution
Habitat
Habit
Distinguishing Features
Seedling
Stems and Leaves
Flowers and Fruit
Reproduction and Dispersal
Environmental Impact
Other Impacts
Legislation
Management
Similar Species
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Click on images to enlarge

infestation of adult plants (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

infestation of younger plants (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

habit (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

habit (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

habit of basal rosette of lower leaves (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

close-up of hairy lower leaf (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

upper leaves (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

flower clusters (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

close-up of flowers (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

close-up of seeds (Photo: Steve Hurst at USDA PLANTS Database)

young plant (Photo: Sheldon Navie)

Echium plantagineum

Scientific Name

Echium plantagineum L.

Synonyms

Echium creticum L. (misapplied)
Echium italicum L. (misapplied)
Echium lycopsis L. (misapplied)
Echium violaceum L. (misapplied)
Echium vulgare L. (misapplied)

Family

Boraginaceae

Common Names

blue echium, blue weed, blueweed, Lady Campbell weed, Paterson's curse, plantain-leaf viper's bugloss, purple bugloss, purple echium, purple viper's bugloss, Riverina bluebell, salvation Jane, viper's bugloss

Origin

This species originated in the Mediterranean region. It is native to Europe (i.e. the UK, France, Portugal, Spain, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Yugoslavia and Ukraine), the Azores, the Madeira Islands, the Canary Islands, northern Africa (i.e. northern Algeria, Egypt, northern Libya, Morocco and Tunisia) and western Asia.

Cultivation

Originally cultivated as a garden ornamental in the 1800's. It is no longer deliberately cultivated, though naturalised populations are regarded as being very useful to the honey industry.

Naturalised Distribution

A very widely naturalised species that is most common in the southern parts of the country and has a scattered distribution in other regions. It is very common in south-western Western Australia, south-eastern South Australia, Victoria, the ACT and New South Wales. Less common in Tasmania, south-eastern Queensland, the southern parts of the Northern Territory, in other parts of South Australia and Western Australia. Also present in other parts of Queensland and naturalised on Norfolk Island.

Naturalised overseas in southern Africa, New Zealand, USA and southern South America.

Habitat

Mainly a weed of temperate regions, but also relatively common in sub-tropical and semi-arid environments. It inhabits pastures, crops, roadsides, disturbed sites, waste areas, grasslands, open woodlands and gardens.

Habit

An upright (i.e. erect) and short-lived (i.e. annual or occasionally biennial) herbaceous plant usually growing 20-60 cm tall, but occasionally reaching up to 1.5 m in height. It forms a basal rosette of leaves during the early stages of growth.

Distinguishing Features

Seedling

Its two seed leaves (i.e. cotyledons) are rounded or oval (i.e. elliptic) in shape with rounded tips (i.e. obtuse apices). They are borne on short stalks (i.e. petioles) and are somewhat hairy (i.e. pubescent). The first true leaves are oval (i.e. elliptic) in shape with rounded tips (i.e. obtuse apices). They are covered in long hairs and have a prominent central vein (i.e. midrib).

Stems and Leaves

Several upright (i.e. erect) much-branched stems arise from the basal rosette of leaves. These stems are green in colour and covered in stiff hairs or bristles (i.e. they are hispid).

Rosette leaves are large (5-25 cm long and 1.5-10 cm wide), oval or oblong in shape, with stalks (i.e. petioles) up to 6 cm long. These leaves have entire and often wavy (i.e. undulating) margins and rounded tips (i.e. obtuse). Stem (i.e. cauline) leaves are smaller and narrower, alternately arranged, and have pointed tips (i.e. acute apices). They are stalkless (i.e. sessile) and sometimes even stem-clasping. All leaves are somewhat hairy (i.e. pubescent).

Flowers and Fruit

The tubular flowers (20-30 mm long) are usually purple or blue in colour (rarely pink, reddish-purple or white). They are borne along one side of a short curved or coiled stem (i.e. in a boragoid inflorescence). These flowers have five petals that are fused into a tube (i.e. corolla tube) for most of their length and five elongated (i.e. linear-lanceolate) hairy sepals (8-11 mm long). They also have five stamens, two of which are significantly longer than the others and extend beyond the flower tube, and a very long style topped with a small two-lobed stigma. Flowering occurs mostly during spring and summer.

The fruit is a cluster of four 'seeds' (i.e. nutlets or mericarps) that are surrounded by five bristly bracts (i.e. the persistent sepals). The 'seeds' (2-3 mm long) are brown, grey or black in colour, woody, three-angled, and roughly textured (i.e. strongly wrinkled and pitted).

Reproduction and Dispersal

This species reproduces by seed. These seeds that are dispersed by water, animals and as a contaminant of agricultural produce.

Environmental Impact

Paterson's curse (Echium plantagineum) is regarded as a significant environmental weed in Victoria, the ACT, South Australia, Western Australia and New South Wales, and an environmental weed in Tasmania, Queensland and the Northern Territory. It is very widespread and troublesome, recently being listed as a priority environmental weed in nine Natural Resource Management regions.

This species occurs in various natural habitats including grasslands, open woodlands and heathlands. It quickly establishes large populations in disturbed areas and can form very dense stands that compete vigorously with smaller native plants and impede the regeneration of overstorey vegetation. Paterson's curse (Echium plantagineum) is common in numerous conservation areas in southern Australia (e.g. Flagstaff Memorial Nature Reserve and Pulletop Nature Reserve in southern New South Wales, Brownhill Creek Recreation Park and Marino Conservation Park in South Australia and Bendoc Nature Conservation Reserve and Roslynmead Nature Conservation Reserve in Victoria). In fact, it is one of the top three most commonly occurring environmental weeds in conservations areas in Victoria (i.e. it has been recorded in over 40 conservation parks in this state).

Paterson's curse (Echium plantagineum) is also common in threatened eucalypt woodland communities of the Avon Wheatbelt region in south-western Western Australia and is an important environmental weed in terrestrial reserves in the Shark Bay region.

Other Impacts

Paterson’s curse (Echium plantagineum ) quickly replaces other more palatable plants in heavily grazed pastures, reducing the value of the pasture and replaces the natural vegetation of the area. Though it is occasionally considered useful in some semi-arid rangeland pastures, it costs Australian graziers approximately $30 million every year in lost production and control costs.

It can sometimes also be poisonous to livestock, being particularly toxic to pigs and horses, and may also cause skin irritations and hay fever in humans. Paterson’s curse (Echium plantagineum) is also a common weed of crops in the temperate regions of Australia.

Legislation

This species is declared under legislation in the following states and territories:

Management

For information on the management of this species see the following resources:

Similar Species

Paterson's curse (Echium plantagineum) is very similar to viper's bugloss (Echium vulgare) and relatively similar to Italian bugloss (Echium italicum). These species can be differentiated by the following differences:

Paterson's curse (Echium plantagineum) is also somewhat similar to the heliotropes (Heliotropium spp.) and the yellow burrweeds (Amsinckia spp.). However, all of these species can easily be distinguished from Paterson's curse (Echium plantagineum) by their smaller flowers (less than 10 mm long and 3-6 mm across) which are often also white or yellow in colour.