Pet safety
Is Large-flowered Tylecodon toxic to dogs?
Tylecodon grandiflorus
Yes — large-flowered tylecodon is toxic to dogs according to the ASPCA. Keep it well away from any dog that chews plants; reactions can be significant. This classification follows the ASPCA Toxic and Non-Toxic Plant List. Like all Tylecodon species, T. grandiflorus contains bufadienolide cardiac glycosides (cotyledoside and tyledosides) — neurotoxic compounds that cause cardiac arrhythmia and neuromuscular failure. These are well documented in veterinary toxicology literature (NCBI/PMC) and SANBI. Not individually listed by ASPCA (a US-focused database that rarely covers specialist succulents from southern Africa), but the genus toxicity is unambiguous. Do not keep where children, cats, dogs, or other pets can access any part of the plant.
What to do if your dog ate large-flowered tylecodon
- Remove any plant material from your dog's mouth and move large-flowered tylecodon out of reach.
- Note how much was eaten and when, and watch for drooling, vomiting, or lethargy.
- Do not induce vomiting unless a vet or poison-control specialist instructs you to.
- Call your vet or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center on (888) 426-4435 and follow their advice.
- Bring a leaf or photo of large-flowered tylecodon to the appointment so it can be treated correctly.
General guidance, not veterinary advice. If you think your dog has eaten large-flowered tylecodon, contact your vet or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center on (888) 426-4435 — do not wait for symptoms to worsen.
Is large-flowered tylecodon toxic to dogs? — FAQ
Is large-flowered tylecodon toxic to dogs?
Yes — large-flowered tylecodon is toxic to dogs according to the ASPCA. Keep it well away from any dog that chews plants; reactions can be significant. Like all Tylecodon species, T. grandiflorus contains bufadienolide cardiac glycosides (cotyledoside and tyledosides) — neurotoxic compounds that cause cardiac arrhythmia and neuromuscular failure. These are well documented in veterinary toxicology literature (NCBI/PMC) and SANBI. Not individually listed by ASPCA (a US-focused database that rarely covers specialist succulents from southern Africa), but the genus toxicity is unambiguous. Do not keep where children, cats, dogs, or other pets can access any part of the plant.
What are the symptoms if a dog eats large-flowered tylecodon?
Like all Tylecodon species, T. grandiflorus contains bufadienolide cardiac glycosides (cotyledoside and tyledosides) — neurotoxic compounds that cause cardiac arrhythmia and neuromuscular failure. These are well documented in veterinary toxicology literature (NCBI/PMC) and SANBI. Not individually listed by ASPCA (a US-focused database that rarely covers specialist succulents from southern Africa), but the genus toxicity is unambiguous. Do not keep where children, cats, dogs, or other pets can access any part of the plant. Signs usually appear soon after chewing rather than hours later — watch for drooling, pawing at the mouth, vomiting, loss of appetite, or unusual lethargy after your dog has had access to large-flowered tylecodon.
What should I do if my dog ate large-flowered tylecodon?
Stay calm. Remove any plant from your dog's mouth and take the plant away. Note how much was eaten and when, and do not induce vomiting unless told to. Call your vet or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center on (888) 426-4435 and follow their advice; a leaf or photo helps the vet treat it correctly.
Is large-flowered tylecodon toxic to cats too?
The ASPCA classification Growli uses applies to both cats and dogs: Large-flowered Tylecodon is toxic to cats as well. See the full large-flowered tylecodon pet-safety guide for both species.
What is a dog-safe alternative to large-flowered tylecodon?
For a similar look without the risk, see the best dogs-safe plants list — every plant there is ASPCA non-toxic to cats and dogs.
Full large-flowered tylecodon pet-safety
- Is large-flowered tylecodon toxic to cats and dogs? — the full guide for both pets
- Is large-flowered tylecodon toxic to cats?
- My dog ate large-flowered tylecodon — emergency steps
- Best dogs-safe plants — the full ASPCA non-toxic list
- Complete large-flowered tylecodon care guide