Alright, English Ivy is on the list, per that thread.
I nominate melaleuca (melaleuca quinquenervia, also known as tea tree). An Australian native that's gotten away in the southern U.S, invasive doesn't begin to describe it. It tolerates extreme wet and extreme dry, it resprouts from cut stumps and re-roots from the cut logs, and it throws MILLIONS of seeds when it's stressed (like, when you cut it, or burn it, or poison it). It poisons the soil so that nothing else will grow in a stand of it. The pollen is highly allergenic. Unless you want to make a lot of enemies, don't let it get within a thousand miles of your garden.
Chinese lanterns come to mind, as does lily-of-the-valley.
Anyone else?
I nominate melaleuca (melaleuca quinquenervia, also known as tea tree). An Australian native that's gotten away in the southern U.S, invasive doesn't begin to describe it. It tolerates extreme wet and extreme dry, it resprouts from cut stumps and re-roots from the cut logs, and it throws MILLIONS of seeds when it's stressed (like, when you cut it, or burn it, or poison it). It poisons the soil so that nothing else will grow in a stand of it. The pollen is highly allergenic. Unless you want to make a lot of enemies, don't let it get within a thousand miles of your garden.
Chinese lanterns come to mind, as does lily-of-the-valley.
Anyone else?