Water Hemlock

Water Hemlock
©Intermountain Herbarium

Common Name(s):

Water Hemlock
Western waterhemlock

Scientific Name:

Cicuta douglasii (DC.) Coult. & Rose

Scientific Name Synonyms:

Cicuta maculata L. var. californica (Gray) Boivin

Symbol:

CIDO

Description:

Life Span: Perennial

Origin: Native

Season: Cool

Growth Characteristics: An erect forb, growing 3 to 7 feet tall, usually swollen at the base. Stem has cross partitions at the base. Roots also have partitions inside, and a musky odor. It begins growth in the spring, and flowers in late spring and early summer. Reproduction is by seed and tuber branching.

Flowers/Inflorescence: Flowers are small, white, and grouped in umbrella shaped clusters.

Fruits/Seeds: Fruit is a schizocarp, somewhat kidney-shaped, tea-colored, with corky ridges.

Leaves: Alternate, narrow to broadly lance-shaped, with toothed margins. A distinguishing characteristic is that the veins in the leaf run to the notches between the teeth.

Ecological Adaptions:

Water hemlock is a wetland plant and is especially common in pastures or untilled areas. It is found along mountain streams and valley ditch banks.

Soils: Occurs on wet, fertile soils at the waters edge. It is most common in deep loams, clay loams, or clays.

Associated Species: Nebraska sedge, redtop, bulrush, timothy.

Uses and Management:

Water hemlock is probably the most poisonous plant in Utah, containing alkaloids. The roots are the most toxic part of the plant. When roots become exposed and are eaten by livestock, death occurs in 1 to 12 hours. The leaves and stems lose most of their toxicity as they mature. Sheep do not seem to be as affected as cattle. Symptoms of poisoning include muscle twitch, rapid pulse, rapid breathing, tremors, convulsions, excessive salivation or frothing at the mouth and dilation of the pupils.

It can be controlled with herbicide application, although there is some evidence that toxicity of plant increases after spraying until death of the plant.