Established. (Booy, O. & Key, J. (2020) Prioritising the management of established invasive non-native species in Anguilla: eradication and spread prevention. Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat, Animal and Plant Health Agency, pp. 1–54); Escaped - Not native, introduced deliberately to Anguilla, and has definitely naturalised. (Hochart, J., Buckmire, Z. & Tye, A. (2024 and continuously updated). Database of the Flora of Anguilla. Anguilla Department of Natural Resources and Anguilla National Trust, The Valley.); Currently thought to occur only in a small number of populations (5-10) and small total area (<1ha) on the main island of Anguilla, probably associated with hotels. However, the exact distribution of the species is not known and there is low confidence in the situation assessment for this species. 1 island, 5-10 populations, <1 ha (Booy, O. & Key, J. (2020) Prioritising the management of established invasive non-native species in Anguilla: eradication and spread prevention. Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat, Animal and Plant Health Agency, pp. 1–54); Common throughout the Caribbean region where it was introduced in the early 1900s, in disturbed and natural habitats. (FERA and Animal and Plant Health Agency (2020) UK Overseas Territories Factsheet , Produced for Anguilla and the Turks and Caicos Islands. March.); Commonly found growing along roads, riverbanks, agricultural fields, forest openings, and disturbed areas moist undisturbed forests in tropical and subtropical regions. Brazilian Jasmine is a vigorous vine that climbs high into the canopy of mature forests, completely smothering native trees, out-competing understory plants. (FERA and Animal and Plant Health Agency (2020) UK Overseas Territories Factsheet , Produced for Anguilla and the Turks and Caicos Islands. March.);
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Invasive. (Olaf Booy & Jill Key. 2020. Prioritising the management of established invasive non-native species in Anguilla report - Table 3);
A woody evergreen vine native to sub Saharan Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. (FERA and Animal and Plant Health Agency (2020) UK Overseas Territories Factsheet , Produced for Anguilla and the Turks and Caicos Islands. March.); J. fluminense spreads by seeds and vegetatively by cuttings and lateral extensions of the stems. (Invasive Species Management Plan: Eradication of Brazilian Jasmine (Jasminum fluminense) from Anguilla (2020) Management Plan. [Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat])
A woody vine, used for horticulture, most likely imported for planting around hotels. (Booy, O. & Key, J. (2020) Prioritising the management of established invasive non-native species in Anguilla: eradication and spread prevention. Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat, Animal and Plant Health Agency, pp. 1–54); It is cultivated as an ornamental plant. J. fluminense spreads by seeds and vegetatively by cuttings and lateral extensions of the stems. (Invasive Species Management Plan: Eradication of Brazilian Jasmine (Jasminum fluminense) from Anguilla (2020) Management Plan. [Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat])
Connor, R.A., Hodge, K.V.D., Samuel, C.A., Wong, L.J. & Pagad, S. (2022) Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species - Anguilla. Version 1.6. Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG). Checklist dataset. Available at: https://doi.org/10.15468/okwfc4 accessed via GBIF.org on 2022-07-25 (to find the intial list of species); Booy, O. & Key, J. (2020) Prioritising the management of established invasive non-native species in Anguilla: eradication and spread prevention. Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat, Animal and Plant Health Agency, pp. 1–54 (to check Establishment Status); FERA and Animal and Plant Health Agency (2020) UK Overseas Territories Factsheet , Produced for Anguilla and the Turks and Caicos Islands. March. (Other information, Establishment Status); Invasive Species Management Plan: Eradication of Brazilian Jasmine (Jasminum fluminense) from Anguilla (2020) Management Plan. [Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat] (Other information, Habitat); Key, J., Booy, O. & Connor, R. (2020) STOP THE SPREAD: Invasive species in Anguilla summary report. Great Britain Non-native Species Secretariat, Animal and Plant Health Agency, Department of Environment Government of Anguilla, pp. 1, 7.; Hochart, J., Buckmire, Z. & Tye, A. (2024 and continuously updated). Database of the Flora of Anguilla. Anguilla Department of Natural Resources and Anguilla National Trust, The Valley. (First record);