Samantha Ahnemann Real Estate

Samantha Ahnemann Real Estate ⭐️ 7TH GENERATION TEXAN 🤠
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05/27/2026

The Toxic Trio: North America's Most Dangerous Umbellifers part 1

Within the botanical family Apiaceae (formerly Umbelliferae) are some of our most valuable agricultural crops…carrots, celery, fennel, and parsley. Yet, this same family harbors a trio of dangerous, non-native invasive weeds that pose severe threats to human health, livestock, and native ecosystems.

Poison hemlock (Conium maculatum), wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa), and giant hogweed (Heracleum mantegazzianum) are expanding across pastures, roadsides, and waterways. While they share similar umbrella-shaped flower clusters (umbels) and a tendency to colonize disturbed soils, their mechanisms of harm are very different.

-Poison Hemlock-Introduced from Europe in the 1800s as a DECORATIVE garden plant, poison hemlock is now widespread across nearly every state. It does its damage from the inside out.

Poison hemlock does not cause skin blisters on contact. Instead, it contains highly potent PIPERIDINE alkaloids (such as coniine) that act as a neurotoxin. If ingested, these compounds block nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in the central nervous system, leading to an ascending paralysis. The respiratory muscles eventually fail, causing death by asphyxiation while the victim remains fully conscious. Gruesome.

Poison hemlock does not cause typical contact dermatitis, rashes, or blistering the way poison ivy, wild parsnip, or giant hogweed do.
However, there is a massive nuance here that catches many people off guard. While it is a common misconception that its sap causes skin burns, the plant is still hazardous to handle bare-handed due to how its toxins can be absorbed by your body. Poison hemlock doesn’t contain the typical skin irritants Urushiol or furanocoumarins. Its chemical defense consists of piperidine alkaloids (like coniine), which are neurotoxins that TARGET THE CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTME, NOT THE EPIDERMIS. If you brush intact skin against an intact hemlock plant, you will typically feel absolutely nothing.

Even though it won't give you a blistered rash, you should never handle poison hemlock without heavy gloves and long sleeves. Its dangerous alkaloids can bypass your skin in two specific ways.
First are micro-abrasions and cuts. If you crush the plant or snap the stems bare-handed, the toxic sap can enter your bloodstream through small cuts, torn cuticles, chapped skin, or scrapes.

Second are accidental “Ingestion/Mucosal Transfer”. If you get the sap on your bare skin and later rub your eyes, wipe your nose, or eat a sandwich without washing up, you can accidentally ingest a sub-lethal or lethal dose.

Symptoms of systemic poisoning from hemlock contact/ingestion are severe and happen fast (within 15 minutes to a few hours).

It is a major threat to cattle, horses, sheep, and goats. As little as 0.2% to 0.5% of an animal’s body weight in green leaves is a lethal dose. Also, if pregnant livestock consume sub-lethal amounts during early gestation, the alkaloids act as teratogens, causing severe birth defects such as cleft palates and crooked calf disease.

Hemlock is an aggressive biennial that thrives in riparian zones, ditches, and pasture borders. It forms dense stands that completely chokes out native forage and block water access for wildlife.

-Wild Parsnip-The “Blister Agent”
Wild parsnip is the feral cousin of the cultivated garden variety that escaped cultivation centuries ago. It is dangerous because it is highly widespread and frequently misidentified as harmless wild dill or fennel due to its yellow flowers.

Wild parsnip targets the skin externally via phytophotodermatitis. Its clear, watery sap contains a massive concentration of furanocoumarins. When snapped or bruised foliage wipes sap onto human skin, exposure to the ultraviolet (UV) rays of the sun triggers a chemical reaction that cross-links with cellular DNA, destroying the skin cells.

The resulting injury mimics a severe thermal or chemical burn, resulting in intense redness followed by massive, fluid-filled blisters within 24 to 48 hours. The long-term damage includes localized hyperpigmentation (dark, purplish-brown skin staining) and severe photosensitivity in the affected area that can last for years!

In hay fields and pastures, wild parsnip degrades forage quality. Livestock generally avoid it when fresh due to its bitter taste, BUT they will eat it when dried in square or round bales, which can reduce herd weight gain and cause chemical blistering on the unpigmented skin of muzzles and teats.

-Giant Hogweed-A Public Health Emergency in Some Regions
Hailing from the Caucasus region of Eurasia, giant hogweed is classified as a Federal Noxious W**d. It is a true botanical monster, capable of growing 15 to 20 feet tall with leaves up to 5 feet across! It represents the most acute, severe public health threat of the three.

Giant hogweed uses the same furanocoumarin weapon as wild parsnip, but on a massive scale. Because the plant is so large, the volume of sap contained within its thick, hollow, purple-spotted stems is immense. Contact with even a small amount of sap followed by sunlight exposure causes deep, third-degree-style chemical burns and permanent scarring.

If the sap is transferred from fingers to the eyes, or if a string trimmer aerosolizes the sap near a person's face, it can cause severe corneal damage, resulting in temporary or permanent blindness.

Giant hogweed is very aggressive and colonizes riverbanks and stream corridors. Because it is a biennial or short-lived perennial, it dies back completely in the winter, leaving riverbanks entirely bare. Without the fibrous root systems of native grasses and shrubs to hold the soil, spring rains cause catastrophic soil erosion and bank collapse along infested waterways. It is not currently found in most areas of the south, as it prefers cooler, more moist climates.

If using mechanical or chemical control on any of these three species, operators must wear complete personal protective equipment (PPE), including water-resistant Tyvek suits, chemical gloves, and full face shields. NEVER USE A STRING TRIMMER OR ANY KIND OF W**D WHACKER on wild parsnip or giant hogweed, as the rapid spinning line atomizes the furanocoumarin-rich sap, coating the operator in a toxic mist.

Look what’s coming in at 1885 & 920!
05/12/2026

Look what’s coming in at 1885 & 920!

Happy May 5th!
05/05/2026

Happy May 5th!

05/04/2026

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