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Do Rabbits Eat Alyssums?

Alyssum may refer to Lobularia maritima, sweet alison, or sweet alyssum in the genus Lobularia or any of the 100-170 flowering plants in genus Alyssum. Initially, Lobularia maritima was classified under the genus Alyssum, hence the name. Both are in the Brassicaceae family, otherwise known as the cabbage, mustard, or crucifer family.

Rabbits don’t eat alyssum flowers or foliage (leaves, petals, or stems). While you may eat the sweet alyssum petals, tender stems and leaves (raw or cooked), and some alyssum foliage may serve as food for Gem (Orthonama obstipata) and other caterpillars in the order Lepiodeptera, rabbits hate them and will not eat them, i.e., they are one of the bunny resistant plants.

Do Rabbits Eat Alyssum

Therefore, if you are growing them for your consumption or as a ground cover, being one of the heat and drought-resistant plants, be assured that wild or bunnies will not bother than at all.

However, when there is scarcity, it is possible for your bunnies to nibble some of your sweet alyssums but won’t cause much damage since they are plants they would usually avoid.

More about genus Alyssum

The genus Alyssum‘s flowering plants are mainly annual and perennial herbaceous plants (with a few small shrubs). They are native to native to northern Africa, Europe, and Asia, with an immense diversity found around the Mediterranean Sea.

Besides white, pink, violet, or lavender flower clusters, sweet alyssums are cultivated as a ground cover. They require little maintenance. It would help if you grew them in early spring since it can tolerate heat and drought.

Finally, some of its cultivars include Snow Cloth, Royal Carpet, Navy Blue, Little Dorrit, Oriental Nights, Benthamii, Wonderland Copper, Tiny Tim, Easter Bonnet Violet, among many others.

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