- Image: Foliage
- Image: Inflorescence with red stigmas (female flowers).
- Image: Young leaf, poison notes
Image: Foliage

A perennial shrub with large leaves growing up to 4 m tall, a common weed of creek banks, neglected suburban blocks and other waste places.
Not noxious in Queensland. It has been declared as a noxious species in New South Wales and the Northern Territory.
Stems are hollow and hairless growing up to 2 m long, pale, dull green with a reddish tinge.
Leaves arranged alternately on the stem with leaf stalks (petioles) 10-30 cm long, large (10-70 cm across) with seven to ten triangular lobes. Young leaves are often reddish-brown in colour.
Image: Inflorescence with red stigmas (female flowers).

Large inflorescences (flowering parts) form mainly during summer at the branch tips. The flowers are of separate sexes — fluffy cream or yellow coloured male flowers at the base of the inflorescence and female flowers with conspicuous red stigmas at the top.
Fruit are greenish-red spiny capsules (15-25 mm across) which divide into three segments, each containing a single seed. Seeds are mottled and up to 1 cm long.
They spread by seed which come up in their thousands on disturbed ground. Mulch will suppress them and also make it easier to pull them out if they appear.
Image: Young leaf, poison notes

Ricin is contained in the seeds. Ingestion of 2 to 8 seeds has resulted in death in adults. Ricin causes severe irritation of the throat, gullet and stomach when ingested.
Gastrointestinal effects usually occur in under 6 hours. Late complications occur in the liver, brain, kidney, and adrenal glands, typically 2 to 5 days after ingestion. The individual may have a symptom free period between the gut symptoms and the multiple organ failures.
