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Research indicates buckthorn provides a winter host for soybean aphid in the fall. Buckthorn serves a shelter for soybean aphid eggs to overwinter. In addition, buckthorn also disrupts the balance of our natural world pushing out desirable native understory plants, creating a dark dense thicket. There are a lot of seeds and you might think these berries are good food source for birds, but the berries are actually a laxative for birds and are cathartic. Buckthorn starts as a small sprout, but before you know it itamp;#39;s a half inch in diameter and 2 to 3 feet tall. In Minnesota, Iamp;#39;ve discovered buckthorn thatamp;#39;s 10 inches in diameter and 35 feet tall and into the overstory canopy of the forest. Buckthorn is a well-known plant I think most of us know is not welcome in Minnesota. Itamp;#39;s a shrub or small tree that was originally brought over by Europeans in the mid-1800s for landscaping purposes, but with the help of berry-eating birds itamp;#39;s a plant that got