Common name: Japanese Knotweed
Reynoutria japonica Houtt. APNI* Synonyms: Fallopia japonica (Houtt.) Ronse Decr. APNI* Polygonum cuspidatum Sieber & Zucc. APNI* Tiniaria japonica APNI* Polygonum cuspidatum var. compactum APNI*
Description: Perennials 1.5–3 m high, forming a dense thicket. Stems annual, robust, bamboo-like, often glaucous and red-brown, numerous and branched above, dying back in winter.
Leaves broad-ovate, 5–15 cm long, 2–12 cm wide, glabrous, with the apex long-acuminate to cuspidate, the base truncate.
Flowers in clusters of 2–4, in paniculate inflorescences with slender, rather lax branches; perianth segments greenish to creamy white, the outer 3 developing broad wings at maturity.
Achene 2–4 mm long, glossy, dark brown to blackish.
Distribution and occurrence: Cultivated in gardens, occasionally persistent on old garden sites or naturalised in temperate areas of SE Australia (? Cooma, ?Albury; Victoria, Tasmania). Native of Korea, Japan, Taiwan and eastern mainland China. Cultivated in Europe and North America but now considered a problem weed there. Hybridizes readily with R. sacchalinenis; the hybrid is known as R. x bohemica.
NSW subdivisions: *ST, *SWS, *SWS
Other Australian states: *Tas. *Vic.
Previously treated as Fallopia japonica or Polygonum cuspidatum. It hybridises with R. sachalinensis, and that hybrid (R. x bohemica) is also in Australia. These giant knotweeds are potentially serious weeds in cooler climate regions of Australia.
Text by K. L. Wilson (1990); edited KL Wilson (Jan 2008, July 2009, Sept 2017) Taxon concept: Flora of NSW 1 (1990)
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