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πŸŽ‹ Invasive Plant Rules/Tree-of-Heaven Removal

Tree-of-Heaven Removal: Mesa vs Phoenix

How do tree-of-heaven removal rules compare between Mesa, AZ and Phoenix, AZ?

Mesa and Phoenix have similar restriction levels.

Mesa, AZ

Maricopa County

Few Restrictions

Arizona Department of Agriculture lists Ailanthus altissima (tree-of-heaven) as a regulated noxious weed but not prohibited. Maricopa County has no specific tree-of-heaven removal mandate. Removal is recommended due to invasive spread and spotted lanternfly host risk.

View full Mesa rules β†’

Phoenix, AZ

Maricopa County

Few Restrictions

Arizona Department of Agriculture lists Ailanthus altissima (tree-of-heaven) as a regulated noxious weed but not prohibited. Maricopa County has no specific tree-of-heaven removal mandate. Removal is recommended due to invasive spread and spotted lanternfly host risk.

View full Phoenix rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactMesaPhoenix
State statusRegulated, not prohibitedRegulated, not prohibited
Removal requiredNoNo
Lanternfly hostPrimaryPrimary
StatuteARS 3-204ARS 3-204

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Mesa FAQ

Do I have to remove a tree-of-heaven on my property?

Not legally required in Arizona. The tree is regulated but not prohibited. Most experts and county extension agents recommend removal due to invasive spread and the risk of hosting spotted lanternfly.

How do I kill a tree-of-heaven?

Cutting alone fails because the tree resprouts aggressively. Use the hack-and-squirt method with triclopyr or glyphosate herbicide, or basal bark treatment, in late summer for best results. Contact AZ Extension for guidance.

Phoenix FAQ

Do I have to remove a tree-of-heaven on my property?

Not legally required in Arizona. The tree is regulated but not prohibited. Most experts and county extension agents recommend removal due to invasive spread and the risk of hosting spotted lanternfly.

How do I kill a tree-of-heaven?

Cutting alone fails because the tree resprouts aggressively. Use the hack-and-squirt method with triclopyr or glyphosate herbicide, or basal bark treatment, in late summer for best results. Contact AZ Extension for guidance.

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