Multiflora rose
Rosa multiflora Thunb.

SOURCE: The following information on this species is taken, in part, from the Plant Conservation Alliance, Alien Plant Working Group, Weeds Gone Wild website, Fact Sheets. The Fact Sheet information for this species can be found at http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/factmain.htm. Modifications include additional pictures and resource information. Specific species management and control information is provided elsewhere. Check the website link provided to check for future updates. The last update for this fact sheet is November 2001.

NATIVE RANGE: Japan, Korea, and eastern China

DESCRIPTION: Multiflora rose is a thorny, perennial shrub with arching stems (canes), and leaves divided into five to eleven sharply toothed leaflets. The base of each leaf stalk bears a pair of fringed bracts.

Photos: James H. Miller, USDA Forest Service, www.invasive.org


Beginning in May or June, clusters of showy, fragrant, white to pink flowers appear, each about an inch across. Small bright red fruits, or rose hips, develop during the summer, becoming leathery, and remain on the plant through the winter.

Photos: James H. Miller, USDA Forest Service, www.invasive.org

ECOLOGICAL THREAT: Multiflora rose is extremely prolific and can form impenetrable thickets that exclude native plant species. This exotic rose readily invades open woodlands, forest edges, successional fields, savannas and prairies that have been subjected to land disturbance.

DISTRIBUTION IN THE UNITED STATES: Multiflora rose occurs throughout the U.S., with the exception of the Rocky Mountains, the southeastern Coastal Plain and the deserts of California and Nevada.

HABITAT IN THE UNITED STATES: Multiflora rose has a wide tolerance for various soil, moisture, and light conditions. It occurs in dense woods, prairies, along stream banks and roadsides and in open fields and pastures.

BACKGROUND: Multiflora rose was introduced to the East Coast from Japan in 1866 as rootstock for ornamental roses. Beginning in the 1930s, the U.S. Soil Conservation Service promoted it for use in erosion control and as "living fences" to confine livestock. State conservation departments soon discovered value in multiflora rose as wildlife cover for pheasant, bobwhite quail, and cottontail rabbit and as food for songbirds and encouraged its use by distributing rooted cuttings to landowners free of charge. More recently, multiflora rose has been planted in highway median strips to serve as crash barriers and to reduce automobile headlight glare. Its tenacious and unstoppable growth habit was eventually recognized as a problem on pastures and unplowed lands, where it disrupted cattle grazing. For these reasons, multiflora rose is classified as a noxious weed in several states, including Iowa, Ohio, West Virginia, and New Jersey.

BIOLOGY & SPREAD: Multiflora rose reproduces by seed and by forming new plants that root from the tips of arching canes that contact the ground. Fruits are readily sought after by birds which are the primary dispersers of its seed. It has been estimated that an average multiflora rose plant may produce a million seeds per year, which may remain viable in the soil for up to twenty years. Germination of multiflora rose seeds is enhanced by passing through the digestive tract of birds.

For more information on multiflora rose, please contact:
Biological Control of Invasive Plants in the EAstern United States - USDA Forest Service http://www.invasive.org/eastern/biocontrol/22MultifloraRose.html
Element Stewardship Abstract - The Nature Conservancy http://tncweeds.ucdavis.edu/esadocs/documnts/rosamul.html
Fire Effects Information System - USDA Forest Service http://www.fs.fed.us/database/feis/plants/shrub/rosmul/all.html
Invasive Plant Atlas of New England - University of Connecticut http://webapps.lib.uconn.edu/ipane/browsing.cfm?descriptionid=29
Nonnative Invasive Plants of Southern Forests - USDA Forest Service http://www.invasive.org/eastern/srs/ER.html
Plant Invaders of Mid-Atlantic Natural Areas - National Park Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, http://www.invasive.org/eastern/midatlantic/romu.html
Southeast Exotic Pest Plant Council Invasive Plant Manual - SE-EPPC, http://www.invasive.org/eastern/eppc/multirose.html
Stratford Kay, Aquatic and Noncropland Weed Management, Crop Science Department, Box 620, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, (919) 515-5645 Stratford_Kay@ncsu.edu
Weeds Gone Wild: Alien Plant Invaders of Natural Areas - Plant Conservation Alliance http://www.nps.gov/plants/alien/fact/romu1.htm

AUTHORS:
Carole Bergmann, Montgomery County Department of Parks, Silver Spring, MD. Jil M. Swearingen, U.S. National Park Service, Washington, DC.

REFERENCES:
Albaugh, G.P., W.H. Mitchell, and J.C. Graham. 1977. Evaluation of glyphosate for multiflora rose control. Proceedings of the New England Weed Science Society, vol. 31, pp. 283-291.
Amrine, J.W., Jr. and T.A. Stasny. 1993. Biological control of multiflora rose. Pp. 9-21. In McKnight, B.N.(ed.). Biological Pollution. Indiana Acad. Sci., Indianapolis. 261 pp.
Evans, J.E. 1983. A literature review of management practices for multiflora rose (Rosa multiflora). Natural Areas Journal 3(1):6-15.
Fawcett, R.S. 1980. Today's weed--multiflora rose. Weeds Today 11: 22-23.
Szafone, R. 1991. Vegetation Management Guidelines: Multiflora rose (Rosa multiflora Thunb.). Natural Areas Journal 11(4):215-216.
The Nature Conservancy. Multiflora Rose: Element Stewardship Abstract. In: Wildland Weeds Management & Research Program, Weeds on the Web.
Wyman, D. 1949. Shrubs and vines for American gardens. New York:MacMillan Co., 613 pp.

Plant Conservation Alliance, Alien Plant Working Group.

Management and Control Information

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