![Workshop participant Helen Bradbury picked up some vital information to help in the battle against the weeds. Picture by Trevor Paddenburg. Workshop participant Helen Bradbury picked up some vital information to help in the battle against the weeds. Picture by Trevor Paddenburg.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/wXRNchq95bZhpeysFncAhm/3ba6edd3-bedc-49b1-828c-d347327684e6.jpg/r0_0_3024_4032_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Its flowers may be aromatic but there is nothing sweet about Sweet Pittosporum, which is a serious weed tree and is being targeted now in Nature Conservation Margaret River Region's woody weeds campaign.
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To help in the fight against this and other weedy trees that often escape from gardens, Nature Conservation is running the latest in a series of free community woody weed workshops.
It's on July 20 from 2pm-3.30pm in Augusta, joining Nature Conservation staff and local weed guru Rick Ensley to learn how to successfully identify and control some of the most invasive garden escapees, including Sweet Pittosporum, Sydney Golden Wattle, Victorian Teatree and Polygala.
"About 70 per cent of all weeds are escaped garden ornamentals," Nature Conservation's Peta Lierich said.
"These species reproduce and spread rapidly via water, birds, soil movement and people. At the Augusta workshop we'll see firsthand the devastating impacts of green waste dumping near bushland areas."
![Rick Ensley to will teach participants how to successfully identify and control some of the most invasive garden species. Picture by Trevor Paddenburg. Rick Ensley to will teach participants how to successfully identify and control some of the most invasive garden species. Picture by Trevor Paddenburg.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/wXRNchq95bZhpeysFncAhm/4e659da3-e903-4be1-b791-7e7cdc87fc04.jpg/r0_0_3024_4032_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
Peta said the community could help stop the spread by attending the workshop and learning how to identify and control invasive woody weeds, as well as what to plant instead for function, beauty and biodiversity.
"If you need help identifying weeds at your place, make sure you bring photos, leaves, flowers and seedpods to the workshop and we can help I.D them for you," Peta said.
Sweet Pittosporum is in the spotlight this month because the trees are beginning to flower. They are native to eastern Australia but were planted widely in gardens across the South West - and now threaten our iconic karri forests.
"At first they take over the understorey but in time they grow into tall trees and shade out the upper storeys as well," Peta said. "Left unchecked, they degrade our karri forests because they don't allow new karris to germinate and grow to replace the old trees.
![Picture by Trevor Paddenburg. Picture by Trevor Paddenburg.](/images/transform/v1/crop/frm/wXRNchq95bZhpeysFncAhm/f00a316d-bc1b-462d-9825-dec02bc17697.JPG/r0_0_4032_3024_w1200_h678_fmax.jpg)
"The trees might look attractive and seem harmless, but a single tree can infest the whole neighbourhood as birds carry the seed for several kilometres."
Sweet Pittosporum has smooth grey bark and glossy green leaves, often with wavy margins, and sweet-smelling white flowers. Flowers are followed by orange grape-sized fruit.
"Once you're confident in identifying the tree, you can hand-pull seedlings or remove larger shrubs and trees with a pruning saw or chainsaw and treat the cut stumps," Peta said. "Bigger jobs may need qualified contractors or the Nature Conservation Bush Regeneration Team to bring an infestation under control, but it's well worth the effort."
See natureconservation.org.au to register for the Augusta workshop.