Seafood is a great source of omega-3 fatty acids, which are essential for heart and brain health.
This aggressive plant can grow through concrete and asphalt, causing damage to structures and displacing native vegetation.
Purple loosestrife forms dense stands along waterways, outcompeting native wetland plants and reducing habitat for wildlife.
Common reed grows quickly and forms dense stands, displacing native plants and altering wetland habitats.
Giant hogweed produces toxic sap that can cause severe burns and blisters on the skin. It also outcompetes native plants.
Chinese privet forms dense thickets, crowding out native vegetation and reducing biodiversity.
Japanese barberry invades forests and other natural areas, altering ecosystems and providing habitat for ticks that carry Lyme disease.
Also known as saltcedar, tamarisk is a highly invasive shrub that displaces native vegetation and alters hydrology in riparian areas.
Russian olive is a shrub or small tree that invades riparian areas, displacing native plants and altering habitat for wildlife.
Multiflora rose is a thorny shrub that forms impenetrable thickets, displacing native vegetation and reducing habitat for wildlife.