“…Invasive alien plant species over the past decades have posed serious threats to local biodiversity, ecosystem, environmental quality, which requires confronting this threat and moving towards preventing and eliminating import (Marzialetti, et al 2019;Bartz and Kowarik, 2019), for the rapid and remarkable spread of A. saligna trees in This study was conducted in Al-Jabal Al-Akhdar region, which showed the growth of seeds of these trees can be resisted by using the extracts of their parts, this effect is known as auto-toxicity (Favaretto et al, 2017), and this explains the growth of its seeds at long distances from the mother tree. This result agreed with Richardson et al, (2000) who show that invasive plants spread at long distances from each other, and the results showed that all extracts of golden acacia parts significantly reduced the percentage of germination with a clear increase in the average time of germination, and it was noted that the largest inhibitory percentages were for the flower extract followed by the seeds extract this result was confirmed by ElAyebzakhama et al, (2015) that the greatest inhibitory rates were for A. cyanophyll flower extract on seedlings plants.The high toxicity of the golden acacia flowers may be due to the fact that they contain an abundant amount of phenolic compounds benzoic acid, caffeine, o-coumaric acid, in addition to flavonoids quercetin, naringenin, kaempferol (Al-Huqail et al, 2019), which would It interferes with physiological processes through its effect on cell division and elongation, membrane permeability, ion and water absorption, enzyme synthesis, metabolism, photosynthesis, plant hormone metabolism, respiration, protein and nucleic acid synthesis (Cheng and Cheng, 2015).…”