These blooming trees are invasive and will be banned in Ohio next year

24 Mar.,2023

 

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Chances are you've seen a Callery pear tree today –  the white-flowering trees currently blooming all over the city. However, you won't be able to buy, sell or plant these trees starting next year as they have recently been declared an invasive plant.

The Bradford pear and Cleveland Select pear are common varieties of the non-native trees, which first came to the United States from East Asia in the 1950s and '60s. The trees quickly grew in popularity due to their pretty foliage – white flowers in the spring and purple leaves in the fall – and their ability to grow in poor soil. 

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However, due to their resilience and the different cultivars' ability to cross-pollinate, a University of Cincinnati biologist found in 2019 that the trees were crowding out and eliminating native plants, wreaking havoc on the ecosystem. 

The Ohio Department of Agriculture will ban the sale, purchase and planting of all Callery pear trees and add them to the state's official list of invasive plants in January of 2023. The new rule will not affect trees that are planted or sold before January, according to the department's website.

According to WKRC Local 12, Cincinnati Parks volunteers and workers recently began efforts to remove the trees from natural areas.

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