- Air-Potato
- Dioscorea bulbifera
- Bamboo
- Several non-native genera
- Brazilian Peppertree
- Schinus terebinthifolius
- Callery pear
- Pyrus calleryana
- Chinese Privet
- Ligustrum sinense
- Chinese Tallow Tree
- Triadica sebifera
- Cogongrass
- Imperata cylindrica
- Elaeagnus
- Elaeagnus spp.
- Japanese Climbing Fern
- Lygodium japonicum
- Japanese Stiltgrass
- Microstegium vimineum
- Johnson Grass
- Sorghum halepense
- Kudzu
- Pueraria lobata
- Tree of Heaven
- Ailanthus altissima
Elaeagnus
Three invasive shrub species in the Elaeagnaceae family—autumn olive (Elaeagnus umbellata), Russian olive (E. angustifolia), and thorny olive (E. pungens)—are commonly found throughout the southeastern United States. Native to parts of Asia and Europe, all three were introduced between the 1830s and early 1900s as ornamental plants before escaping cultivation and spreading across North America. Elaeagnus species can colonize a wide range of habitats and may grow as arching shrubs or, under certain conditions, even as vines. Once promoted for wildlife, they frequently form dense thickets that outcompete and displace native vegetation. Highly adaptable and resistant to damage, these species also spread easily through wildlife dispersal of their seeds.
A Comparison of Different Chemical Control Application Methods for Managing Elaeagnus pungens in South Carolina
Washington State University, Clemson Extension, Audubon South Carolina, 2025There are no Webinars at this time.
EDD Maps - Thorny Olive
https://www.eddmaps.org/species/subject.cfm?sub=4526Elaeagnus Identification and Control
Clemson University , 2021Thorny Olive
NC Invasive Plant Council



