It is a
herbaceous perennial plant growing to 1-1.2 m tall, with several stems branched from the base. The stems are smooth, hairless, or slightly hairy. The
leaves are small, lanceolate, 4-8.5 cm long and up to 1 cm broad, with a slightly wavy margin. The
flowers are small, produced in
umbels with a basal pair of bright yellow-green petal-like
bracts. Clusters of the bracts appear in late spring, while the actual flowers do not develop until early summer. All parts of the plant contain a toxic white milky sap. It reproduces readily like by
seeds that have a high
germination rate and may remain viable in the soil for at least eight years. The seed
capsules open explosively, dispersing seed up to 5 m from the parent plant, and may be carried further by water and wildlife. Leafy spurge also spreads vegetatively from the
root system, which is complex, reported to reach 8 m into the ground and 5 m across, and may have numerous buds. There are two
subspecies and a
hybrid subspecies: •
Euphorbia esula subsp.
esula. Leaves broadest near apex; umbel bracts 5–15 mm. Throughout the range of the species. •
Euphorbia esula subsp.
tommasiniana (Bertol.) Kuzmanov (syn.
E. waldsteinii (Sojak) A.R.Smith;
E. virgata Waldst. & Kit.). Leaves broadest at the middle; umbel bracts 12–35 mm. Eastern Europe, western Asia. •
Euphorbia esula nothosubsp.
pseudovirgata (Schur) Govaerts. Hybrid between the above two subspecies. ==Confusion with
Euphorbia virgata==