Toxic Plant List

Toxic Plant List

The amount of poison in a plant tends to vary with the location, age of the plant, season and weather conditions. In some plants, the toxin is confined only to certain parts. The following plants may cause toxic symptoms when ingested or dermatitis when handled. In addition to toxic plants, be aware that plants treated with pesticides, insecticides and herbicides are toxic.

House Plants
In the Garden
Vegetables
Hedges & Bushes
Wild Mushrooms
Avoiding Plant Poisoning
First Aid

House Plants

Asparagus Fern (asparagus plumosus) (sprengeri)
Avocado (persea americana)
Blue Gum (eucalyptus globulus)
Buddist Pine (poddocarpus Macrophyllus)
Cacti:

  • Bunny Ears (opuntia microdasy's alkispina)
  • Column (cereus peruvianus)
  • Rat's Tail (aporocactus flagelliformis)
  • Sunset (lokwia famatimensis)
Caladium (Angel's Wings)
Century Plant
Crown of Thorns (euphorbia milii splendens)
Cyclamen
Dieffenbachia
Holly (ilex)
Ivy:
  • Cape (tenecio macroglossus)
  • English (hedera helix)
  • German (senecio mikanioides)
  • Glacier (hedera helix glacier)
  • Gloire de Marengo (hedera canariensis)
  • Needlepoint (hedera helix sagittlae folica)
Jerusalem Cherry (solanum pseudocapsicum)
Mistletoe (phoradendron flavescens)
Philodendron:
  • Arrowhead (syngonium podophyllum)
  • Black Gold ( ph. melanochryson)
  • Devil's Ivy (Pothos) (scindapsus aureus)
  • Elephant's Ear (philodendron hastatum)
  • Fiddle Leaf (ph. pandurae forme)
  • Green Gold (syngonium podophyllum)
  • Marble Queen (scindapsus aureus)
  • Ornamental Pepper (capsicum annuum)
  • Silver Vine (scindapsus pictus)
  • Split Leaf (monstera delicosa)
  • Sweetheart Vine (philodendron scandens)
Red (hemigraphis colorata)
Umbrella Plant (cyperus)

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In the Garden

Azalea (azalea indica)
Bleeding Heart (dicentra formosa)
Calla Lily (zantedeschia aethiopica)
Carnation (dianthus caryophyllus)
Castor-oil plant (ricinus communis)
Chinese or Japanese Lantern (physalis)
Chrysanthemum
Clematis
Crocus (colchicum autumnale)
Daffodil (narcissus)
Delphineum
Foxglove (digitalis purpurea)
Gladiola (bulb)
Hyacinthe (hyacinthus orientalis)
Iris
Jonquil (narcissus)
Lily of the Valley (convallaria)
Morning Glory (ipomaea tricolour)
Narcissus
Oleander (nerium oleander)
Pansy (seeds) (viola tricolour)
Peony (root) (paeonia officinalis)
Primrose (primula)
Sweet Pea (lathyrus odoratus)
Sweet William (dianthus barbatus)

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Vegetables

Potato (green patches on tubers & above ground part)
Rhubarb leaves
Tomato greens

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Hedges & Bushes

Black Locust (robinia pseudoacacia)
Buckthorn (rhamnus cathartica)
Cherry Laurel (laurocerasus officinalis)
Daphne (daphne mezereum)
Elderberry (not berries)
Horse Chestnut (aesculus hippocastanum)
Hydrangea
Laburnum (laburnum anagyroides)
Privet (ligustrum vulgare)
Virginia Creeper (ampelopis brevipedunculata)

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Wild Mushrooms

All unidentified wild mushrooms should be considered toxic until identified by a mycologist.

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Avoiding Plant Poisoning

  1. Become familiar with the dangerous plants in your area, yard and home. Know them by sight and by name.
  2. Do not eat wild plants and mushrooms.
  3. Keep plants, seeds, fruits and bulbs away from children.
  4. Teach children at an early age to keep unknown plants and plant parts out of their mouths. Make them aware of the potential danger of poisonous plants.
  5. Teach children to recognize poison ivy.
  6. Know the plants used as skewers for meat or marshmallows.
  7. Do not allow children to suck nectar from flowers or to make "tea" from leaves.
  8. Know the plant before eating its fruits or berries.
  9. Do not rely on pets, birds or squirrels to indicate non-poisonous plants.
  10. Avoid smoke from burning plants.
  11. Know that heating and cooking do not always destroy toxic substances.
  12. Label and store bulbs and seeds safely away from children and pets.
  13. Do not make homemade medicines from native or cultivated plants.
  14. There are no safe "tests" to distinguish edible from poisonous plants.
  15. Avoid using pesticides, herbicides and insecticides.

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First Aid

  • Call the local poison control centre, hospital emergency or a physician.
  • If you are a caregiver, call the child's parents.
  • If the child needs to go to the emergency department, take along a sample of what the child swallowed (such as the piece of the plant) if possible.
    (Source: Well Beings, Canadian Paediatric Society, 1996, p.238)
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This information was reprinted from the pamphlet, Toxic Plant List, with the permission of the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario. Permission is not required to make copies of this resource for public education purposes. Photocopies may not be sold. To purchase or reprint, contact the Canadian Child Care Federation, 383 Parkdale Avenue, Suite 201, Ottawa, Ontario, K1Y 4R4. Phone (613) 729-5289 or 1 800 858-1412; fax (613) 729-3159; email info@cccf-fcsge.ca. Website www.cccf-fcsge.ca. © CCCF 2003
 

 

The information contained on this website is for information purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for professional advice. If you feel you need medical advice, please see your health professional.