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cat safety reference

Is Iron Cross Begonia safe for cats?

Begonia masoniana

Begonia masoniana is a popular ornamental houseplant known for its textured, puckered leaves featuring a distinct dark brown cross pattern. It contains soluble calcium oxalates that can cause irritation if ingested by pets.

Begonia masonianaIron Cross Begonia
Light
Bright indirect light
Habit
Rhizomatous, clumping
Care
Moderate

Safety status

Cats

Potentially toxic

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

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

What this means for your cat

Cats that bite into Iron Cross Begonia leaves get a burst of soluble calcium oxalates — irritant crystals concentrated underground in the tubers and rhizome. The above-ground parts cause vomiting and drooling; the buried tubers are the most toxic part of the plant and the exposure to worry about. ASPCA lists begonia as toxic but not typically life-threatening for cats.

What to watch for

Most common in cats: drooling, retching, and vomiting shortly after a chew. Pawing at the mouth or face is a giveaway sign of oral irritation. Loss of appetite for a meal or two is common. Severe systemic illness is rare from leaf chewing — far more likely if a cat got into the pot and chewed the tuber.

Time window

Onset is typically immediate — drooling and pawing at the mouth start within minutes of chewing, because the crystals act on contact. ASPCA does not publish a precise duration; oral irritation usually settles within a few hours and GI upset within 24 hours.

When to call the vet

Call the same day for any vomiting that doesn't stop after one episode, persistent drooling beyond an hour, or refusal to eat for more than 12 hours. Tuber/root ingestion is higher-risk — call your vet or ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888-426-4435) immediately. Mouth swelling that affects breathing is a 911-level emergency.

First aid at home

Wipe out any visible plant pieces from your cat's mouth (a soft cloth works) and rinse with lukewarm water if she will tolerate it. Per VCA Animal Hospitals' guidance for toxic-plant exposure with drooling, offering a small amount of milk may help dilute the irritation. Do not try to induce vomiting in cats at home. Call your vet or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888-426-4435) before giving anything else.

Sources: ASPCA, VCA Animal Hospitals.

If a pet has chewed or swallowed plant material and is showing symptoms, contact a veterinarian or poison resource immediately. This product is for structured reference, not diagnosis.

Catsconcern notes

Common signs

Oral irritation, excessive drooling, difficulty swallowing, and vomiting.

Escalation note

The plant contains soluble calcium oxalates which cause immediate irritation upon contact with the mouth and throat. Please contact your veterinarian if ingestion is suspected.

Safer alternatives

No hand-picked alternatives for this plant yet. You can still pick your own using the Compare button on any other plant.

Source evidence

ASPCA Toxic Plant List

toxicology · 99% reliability

Open source

Begonia species contain soluble calcium oxalates that are toxic to dogs and cats.

Cats & dogs pagedogs pageMy cat ate Iron Cross Begonia

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