The Massachusetts Department of Agricultural Resources maintains a Prohibited Plant List of 144 species that may not be imported, sold, traded, purchased, or distributed in the state. The Massachusetts Invasive Plants Advisory Group (MIPAG) has identified 69 additional species as invasive or potentially invasive. These prohibitions apply uniformly across all Middlesex County municipalities.
Massachusetts has one of the nation's more comprehensive invasive plant regulatory frameworks. The Massachusetts Prohibited Plant List, maintained by the Department of Agricultural Resources (MDAR) under MGL Chapter 128B, currently includes 144 plant species that are prohibited from importation, sale, trade, purchase, and distribution in the state. This includes all cultivars, varieties, and hybrids of listed species. Key prohibited species include: Japanese barberry (Berberis thunbergii) β added in 2022 due to its link to tick habitat and Lyme disease, particularly significant in Middlesex County's suburban areas; Norway maple (Acer platanoides); burning bush (Euonymus alatus); glossy buckthorn (Frangula alnus); multiflora rose (Rosa multiflora); oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus); and autumn olive (Elaeagnus umbellata). The Massachusetts Invasive Plants Advisory Group (MIPAG) separately evaluates species and has identified 69 species as Invasive, Likely Invasive, or Potentially Invasive. While MIPAG designations are advisory, they influence the Prohibited Plant List and municipal land management decisions. Middlesex County's mix of suburban development and remaining natural areas (Middlesex Fells Reservation, Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge) makes invasive plant management a regional priority. Many municipalities within the county participate in invasive species removal programs through conservation commissions and volunteer groups. Nurseries and garden centers in Massachusetts are prohibited from selling listed species, and violations are enforced by MDAR.
Sale or distribution of prohibited plant species carries fines enforced by the Department of Agricultural Resources. Nurseries face potential license suspension or revocation. Individual property owners are not penalized for having existing prohibited species but cannot sell or distribute them.
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County has no operational county government - it was abolished July 11, 1997 under M.G.L. c. 34B - so there is no countywide noise ordinance. Massa...
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County treats persistent barking as a nuisance. Animal control handles complaints. Dog licensing required statewide (MGL c.140 Β§155).
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County has no unified leaf blower ordinance. Regulations are set by individual cities and towns such as Cambridge, Newton, Arlington, and Lexington...
Middlesex County, MA
Middlesex County restricts commercial vehicle parking in residential zones. Weight and size limits apply. Overnight storage of heavy trucks prohibited.
Middlesex County, MA
Driveway rules are set by each Middlesex County city or town zoning bylaw. Cambridge, Somerville, Lowell, and Framingham regulate curb cuts, width, paving, a...
Middlesex County, MA
Winter parking bans are the dominant rule across Middlesex County. Most cities prohibit overnight on-street parking from November through April to allow snow...
See how Middlesex County's prohibited species rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.