Boston ivy is an exotic introduced from Asia; it is a woody vine up to 50 feet long (with occasional branches) that grows on or over fences, walls, concrete, masonry, and trees. The lower stems are woody and produce small brown rootlets to adhere to surfaces; upper stems are (also) hairless, green to orange-red in color, with branched tendrils that have adhesive pads at their tips. Leaves are alternate, 6″ long and across exclusive of the long, slender petioles, palmately tri-lobed with undulating or crenate margins. Cymes of flowers lacking a distinct central axis arise from the leaf axils; the cymes are 4″ in both dimensions. Individual flowers are 1/4″ across; they have five yellowish-green petals, five stamens with yellow anthers, and a single style. Fertilized flowers produce berries 3/8″ across. When mature the berries are dark blue with a whitish bloom, usually hidden beneath the leaves; the flower stalks are yellow- or brownish-green or a dull orange-red.
Boston ivy (Parthenocissus tricuspidata) leaves on a concrete wall near the 57th St. Beach underpass. Unlike the other Parthenocissus sp. in Jackson Park (Virginia creeper, woodbine), Boston ivy has simple (not compound) leaves with three prominent lobes.
Boston ivy is an exotic introduced from Asia; it is a woody vine up to 50 feet long (with occasional branches) that grows on or over fences, walls, concrete, masonry, and trees. The lower stems are woody and produce small brown rootlets to adhere to surfaces; upper stems are (also) hairless, green to orange-red in color, with branched tendrils that have adhesive pads at their tips. Leaves are alternate, 6″ long and across exclusive of the long, slender petioles, palmately tri-lobed with undulating or crenate margins. Cymes of flowers lacking a distinct central axis arise from the leaf axils; the cymes are 4″ in both dimensions. Individual flowers are 1/4″ across; they have five yellowish-green petals, five stamens with yellow anthers, and a single style. Fertilized flowers produce berries 3/8″ across. When mature the berries are dark blue with a whitish bloom, usually hidden beneath the leaves; the flower stalks are yellow- or brownish-green or a dull orange-red.
Boston ivy (Parthenocissus tricuspidata) growing on a limestone block wall near 57th St. Beach. In the inset (upper right) are tendrils and adhesive pads of the Boston ivy.
Boston ivy is an exotic introduced from Asia; it is a woody vine up to 50 feet long (with occasional branches) that grows on or over fences, walls, concrete, masonry, and trees. The lower stems are woody and produce small brown rootlets to adhere to surfaces; upper stems are (also) hairless, green to orange-red in color, with branched tendrils that have adhesive pads at their tips. Leaves are alternate, 6″ long and across exclusive of the long, slender petioles, palmately tri-lobed with undulating or crenate margins. Cymes of flowers lacking a distinct central axis arise from the leaf axils; the cymes are 4″ in both dimensions. Individual flowers are 1/4″ across; they have five yellowish-green petals, five stamens with yellow anthers, and a single style. Fertilized flowers produce berries 3/8″ across. When mature the berries are dark blue with a whitish bloom, usually hidden beneath the leaves; the flower stalks are yellow- or brownish-green or a dull orange-red.
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