Because of COVID-19 and
the schools being closed, Boy Scout Troops can’t meet, and so for my readers
who are Boy Scouts in the United States, this article can help you with the
plant identification requirements for First Class. For other plant identification articles go HERE
– Author’s Note
“What
has glossy, green leaves, which turn bright red in the Fall, sometimes grows
along the ground and sometimes as a vine up and around trees”? “Do you know”?
“I
know what you are thinking, but nope, it isn’t poison ivy, it’s virginia
creeper”!
“Virginia
creeper”, you say, “what’s that”?
Virginia
creeper is a perennial, fast-growing, native woody vine, whose scientific name
is “parthenocissus quinquefolia, (L.) Planch”, it is also known as
woodbind or woodbine, false grapes, five leaves, American ivy, five leaved ivy
and thicket ivy. The berries of this
plant are eaten mainly by birds, however many animals, such as mice, squirrels,
chipmunks, skunks, deer, and cattle will eat the leaves, stems, and berries of
this ivy.
The range of eastern poison ivy, from an excerpt from United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service, “Eastern Poison Ivy”. |
The range of virginia creeper, from an excerpt from United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service, “Virginia creeper”. |
Virginia creeper, photograph by the author. |
Many
people confuse virginia creeper with eastern poison ivy. And while virginia
creeper does have some similarities to poison ivy, in that it has a similar
range and just like poison ivy it likes to grow in moist shady spots on the
edges of woodlands, although, again just like poison ivy, it can also grow in
full sunlight; what sets it apart from poison ivy is its five saw-toothed leaves1,
its hairless roots and its blue-black berries.
Remember
the old saying “Leaves of three, let it be”, well virginia creeper has
compound leaves made up of five saw-toothed leaflets, which are two to six (5
to 15 cm). Also, virginia creeper has ¼
inch (64 mm) in diameter bluish-black berries, and its roots have cup-like
adhesive tips, instead of hairs like poison ivy. For more on how to identify poison ivy read, “Poison
Ivy: “Leaves of Three, Let It Be” ©”, HERE
Another difference between virginia
creeper and poison ivy, is that unlike eastern poison ivy, which according to
Michigan State University, up to 90% of the population is allergic to2,
virginia creeper is pretty harmless, although the USDA reports that the “berries
are highly toxic to humans and may be fatal if eaten” and they also report
that the “sap can also cause skin irritation in some people”3.
So the next time you are
wandering through the woods and you see an ivy, creeping along the ground and
up a tree, before you get nervous, count the leaves – if there are five leaves,
you can relax, it is only virginia creeper!
I hope that you continue
to enjoy The Woodsman’s Journal Online and look for me on YouTube at Bandanaman
Productions for other related videos, HERE. Don’t forget to follow me on both The
Woodsman’s Journal Online, HERE, and subscribe to BandanaMan
Productions on YouTube. If you have
questions, as always, feel free to leave a comment on either site. I announce new articles on Facebook at Eric
Reynolds, on Instagram at bandanamanaproductions, and on VK at Eric Reynolds,
so watch for me.
That is all for now, and
as always, until next time, Happy Trails!
Notes
1 According to the article “Virginia
creeper”, by the United
States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service,
virginia creeper usually has five leaves, but occasionally it will have three.
2 Michigan
State University, “Poison ivy: Frequently Asked Questions”
3 According to the article “Virginia
creeper”, by the United
States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service, the
sap of the virginia creeper contains oxalate crystals, which can cause rashes
and skin irritation in some people.
Sources
Michigan
State University, “Poison ivy: Frequently Asked Questions”, https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/poison_ivy_frequently_asked_questions#:~:text=It%20thrives%20in%20full%20sun,wood's%20edge%20type%20of%20plant.,
accessed June 4, 2020
United
States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resource Conservation Service, “Eastern Poison Ivy”, https://plants.sc.egov.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=TORA2,
accessed May 27, 2020
United States Department of Agriculture,
Natural Resource Conservation Service, “Virginia creeper”, https://plants.usda.gov/core/profile?symbol=paqu2, accessed June 4, 2020
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