Pet ingestion lookup

My cat ate Elephant Ear - what should I do?

Alocasia spp.

Potentially toxic

Contact your veterinarian or an animal poison-control resource now, especially if any amount was chewed or swallowed.

Verified against ASPCA/provenance audit 2026-05-06 on May 6, 2026.

Safety verdict

Consulted references classify the plant as toxic or irritating for that pet type.

Signs to watch for

Oral irritation, intense burning and irritation of mouth, tongue and lips, excessive drooling, vomiting, and difficulty swallowing.

Escalation note

The presence of insoluble calcium oxalate crystals causes immediate mechanical irritation. If your cat has ingested any part of this plant, contact your veterinarian or a pet poison control center immediately.

First aid at home

Remove any plant material from your cat's mouth. Offering a small amount of xylitol-free milk, plain yogurt, or vanilla ice cream can help reduce oral irritation (per ASPCA guidance for insoluble-oxalate plants). Do not induce vomiting on your own. Call ASPCA Poison Control at (888) 426-4435 or your veterinarian.

What to watch for

Foamy drooling and head-shaking, often within minutes of a bite. Pawing at the muzzle or rubbing the face on furniture. Vocalizing or hiding from pain. Vomiting and refusal to eat. Rare but serious: swelling of the lips, tongue, or upper airway that affects breathing — that's an emergency.

Time window

Oral signs typically begin within minutes of chewing and peak in the first hour. Most cats are back to normal within 12–24 hours; vomiting or reduced appetite can persist 24–48 hours after a larger bite.

When to call the vet

Call your vet or ASPCA Poison Control at (888) 426-4435 right away. Drive to the ER immediately if you see any swelling around the mouth or throat, labored breathing, or non-stop retching.

What this means for your cat

Cats that nibble Alocasia get an immediate jolt of insoluble calcium oxalate crystals — biting the leaves feels like swallowing tiny needles. Most exposures aren't life-threatening, but the oral pain is intense, and a small number of cats develop airway swelling that does require an ER trip. Take any chewing seriously, even if your cat seems fine ten minutes later.

Sources: ASPCA, Pet Poison Helpline.

Poison-control resources

Plant identity pageElephant Ear & cats

This page summarizes source-bound plant-safety information and is not veterinary advice.

My cat ate Elephant Ear - what should I do? | Pet-Proof Plants