Identifying the Invasive Brooms of the Bay Area

Quick tells between the four species:

  • Round and smooth stems with simple leaves (ie, not in 3 parts) = Spanish
  • Flowers >2, in dense clusters off the end of branches = French
  • Flowers 1 or 2, coming from leaf axils = Cytisus spp.

    1. Then if the flower has red on it and/or the stem is 5-sided = Scotch
    2. If the stem is 8-10 sided (maybe close to round, but definitely not smooth!) and has a lot of narrow stripes = Portuguese

Some notes about the above:

  • All broom with red is Scotch, but not all Scotch broom has red (most doesn't, IME).
  • When looking at how many sides the stem has, look at younger stems higher up on the plant. At the base, it'll probably be pretty round

2 other species worth mentioning here are Gorse (Ulex europaeus) and sweet broom (an ornamental plant I've seen misidentified as French broom; I'm not sure if it's the same as the sweet broom here on iNaturalist (Genista stenopetala) because there are so many synonyms, especially in the nursery trade. I believe the ornamental here is supposed to be sterile and it sure doesn't seem to be invading like it is in NZ....but I still don't trust it).

  • Gorse is pretty simple: it's spiny, and none of the other species have spines.
  • Sweet broom is harder because it's very similar to French broom. The key is that sweet broom has a longer inflorescence (with more flowers, and not as dense), which is at the end of stems. French broom has fewer flowers (4-10), and the inflorescences are on side-shoots toward the end of stems, not on the end of the stem itself.

I want this to be accessible and helpful to everybody, so if anything is unclear please let me know or ask for clarification so I can change it! I intend to get an observation of each species showing all these characteristics to accompany this post too, for all my fellow visual learners.

For more information (like IDing from seed pods – much easier than it might sound!) I highly recommend the UC IPM page on brooms

Publicado el 08 de abril de 2019 a las 11:00 PM por jlmartin jlmartin

Observaciones

Fotos / Sonidos

Autor

jlmartin

Fecha

Abril 6, 2019 a las 12:51 PM PDT

Descripción

Note the flowers single (potentially paired) coming from leaf axils; young stems ±round (8-10 angled) and striated; seed pods inflated, hairy all over

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Escobilla Francesa (Genista monspessulana)

Autor

jlmartin

Fecha

Abril 9, 2019 a las 05:39 PM PDT

Descripción

Note the flowers in ±dense clusters of 4-10, on short side-shoots

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Escoba Rubia (Cytisus scoparius)

Autor

jlmartin

Fecha

Mayo 7, 2019 a las 10:12 AM PDT

Descripción

Note flowers single (potentially paired) from leaf axils; young stems 5-angled (older, woodier stems ±round); seed pod flat, hairy only on the margins

Fotos / Sonidos

Qué

Retama de Olor (Spartium junceum)

Autor

jlmartin

Fecha

Mayo 7, 2019 a las 07:07 PM PDT

Descripción

Note the cylindrical stems, simple leaves (ie, not 3 leaves, like Genista and Cytisus spp.), and flowers in long spikes at the end of stems

Comentarios

Very good journal entry, Jacob! Thanks for putting this together!

Anotado por sambiology hace cerca de 5 años

Very helpful. Trying to separate G. monspessulana and G. stenopetala. If you get some images of the latter, please add those as well.

Anotado por ronvanderhoff hace más de un año

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