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Yellowflag Iris

(Iris pseudacorus)

Yellowflag Iris (Iris pseudacorus)
2A, common in isolated areas of Montana

Quick ID

  • Yellow flowers with 3 downward-pointing sepals and 3 upward-pointing petals
  • Rhizomes contain black sap
  • Plants are often 3 to 5 feet tall
yellowflag iris plant in bloom
Yellowflag Iris Plant

Video Information

Weed Images

Toxic
Yellowflag Iris Rhizome - Photo by Leslie J. Mehrhoff, University of Connecticut, Bugwood.org
Yellowflag Iris stem
Yellowflag Iris leaf
Yellowflag Iris Seed
Yellowflag Iris flower
Yellowflag Iris plant
Yellowflag Iris Infestation - lots of yellow flower plants in field

Weed Specifications

Weed Info
Type Information
Toxicity All parts of the plant are toxic to animals and can also cause severe skin irritation and allergic reactions in humans.
Best Management Practices

Small clumps can be dug out but it’s only effective if the entirety of the rhizomes are removed, repeated mowing can help, specialty aquatic herbicides can be used with proper care.

Habitat Shorelines, ditches, streambanks, floodplains, areas with shallow water, low lying wetlands, moist meadows.
Root Rhizomes that form dense mats.
Leaves Linear, sword-like, erect, flat, bright green, raised midrib, emerge from the ground in a fan-like arrangement.
Lifespan Perennial
Similar Looking Plants Rocky Mountain iris, but Rocky Mountain iris has blue to lavender flowers and is a smaller plant, and cattail, which has round leaf bases, instead of the flat leaf bases yellowflag iris has.
Important Information Established throughout most of the US, escaped ornamental that is still escaping and is often transplanted by homeowners, reproduces from rhizomes and seeds and seeds can be spread long distances with water flow, changes ecology by capturing sediment, chokes out beneficial vegetation, clogs irrigations systems and streams and can narrow waterways.

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