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Arum Lily: Zantedeschia Aethiopica

The arum lily is a weedy evergreen herb native to South Africa that has large arrow-shaped leaves and produces large white flowers with yellow spikes. It spreads through underground tubers and seeds that are occasionally spread by birds and water. The arum lily is weedy because its long-lived tubers allow it to persist under forest canopies and form dense patches that exclude other vegetation, tolerating a wide range of conditions. It can be controlled through digging or cutting tubers and treating stumps and regrowth with herbicide mixtures.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
44 views1 page

Arum Lily: Zantedeschia Aethiopica

The arum lily is a weedy evergreen herb native to South Africa that has large arrow-shaped leaves and produces large white flowers with yellow spikes. It spreads through underground tubers and seeds that are occasionally spread by birds and water. The arum lily is weedy because its long-lived tubers allow it to persist under forest canopies and form dense patches that exclude other vegetation, tolerating a wide range of conditions. It can be controlled through digging or cutting tubers and treating stumps and regrowth with herbicide mixtures.

Uploaded by

Ted Sun
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Arum lily

Zantedeschia aethiopica
Family
Araceae (arum)

Also known as
Death lily

Where is it originally from?


South Africa

What does it look like?


Evergreen, clump-forming tuberous herb (<1.5 m tall), with new
tubers arising from shoots on the rootstock. Dark green, arrow-
shaped leaves are large and leathery. Produces large white flower
with a yellow spike and yellow-green berries (10 mm).

Are there any similar species?


Italian arum (Arum italicum) is similar and is also weedy, but has
distinctive white veins on the tops of the leaves. Photo: Carolyn Lewis

Why is it weedy?
Long-lived and persists under regenerating canopy, forming dense
patches excluding other vegetation. Tolerates wet, wind, salt, hot to
cold, most soil types and moderate shade, and is drought-resistant
once established. Stock avoid it as it is poisonous, allowing it to
gradually dominate grazed sites.

How does it spread?


Seeds drop near to parent plants, and are occasionally spread by
birds and water. Clumps expand slowly by new shoots, and tubers
and seed are spread by dumped vegetation and soil movement.

What damage does it do? Photo: Carolyn Lewis


Smothers the ground preventing the establishment of native plant
seedlings. It is unlikely to poison native fauna.

Which habitats is it likely to invade?


Swamps, open damp areas with low cover, and regenerating ex-
pasture, especially downstream or adjacent to infested areas.

What can I do to get rid of it?


Begin clearance at top of catchment.
1. Slash tops: Leave on site to rot down. Dig out tubers, dry and burn
or bury deeply.
2. Cut down and paint stump: metsulfuron-methyl 600g/kg (1g) +
glyphosate (100ml) + penetrant per L water. Leave on site to rot
down. stems and leaves.
Photo: Carolyn Lewis
3. Spray: metsulfuron-methyl 600g/kg (3g) + glyphosate (150ml) +
penetrant per 10L water.

What can I do to stop it coming back?


Mowing gives no control. Digging usually leaves root fragments and dropped tuber pieces which resprout. Small
infestations may be left untreated where regeneration to dense forest is occurring, however removal of arum will
increase native seedling establishment rate. Exclude all livestock from site when treating.

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