Woodbine is a woody vine that usually uses trees as a substrate; the vine can be as much as 60 feet long. The stem is initially green and hairless; as it matures it becomes woody and develops a reddish- or grey-brown color. The leaves are alternate, palmately compound, usually with five (rarely 4 or 7) leaflets that are about 5″ long and 2.5″ wide with coarse marginal teeth, shiny-green when young but getting duller with age; the compound leaf has a slender 6-8″ long petiole. Three- to six-inch-long clusters of 10-75 flowers arise from the main vines opposite the leaves; the clusters have two main branches and multiply-branched flower stalks with no clear central stem. Individual flowers are inconspicuous, 1/4″ across with five yellowish green petals with narrow margins perpendicular to the plane of the petal and a pointed, curled tip; the petals are initially spreading but later become reflected backwards. In the center of the flower are five pale red stamens with creamy white or purple anthers, a reddish ovary, and a single white, stubby, conical style. The fruits are round blue-black berries 3/8″ across that are reminiscent of grapes in a cluster with red, branched flower stalks; each berry contains four seeds. Woodbine has palmate leaves with five leaflets, very similar to Virginia creeper (
Parthenocissus quinquefolia), but lacks the distinctive aerial roots “bearded” with short tendrils that are present in Virginia creeper. Opposite the base of the leaf petiole on the stem, woodbine produces a thin filament that branches 2-3 times, anchoring the vine by twining around objects. In Virginia creeper, the equivalent filaments are stouter, branch up to 10 times, and end in robust, egg-shaped pads that attach to the substrate. The inflorescence of woodbine lacks a central axis; the inflorescence of Virginia has a distinct central axis.
Wikipedia lists other differences between the two species. Illinois Wildflowers, USDA Plants, and and World Flora Online consider the two species to be one; Minnesota Wildflowers considers them to be separate and distinct. Flora of North America indicates the correct scientific name for woodbine is
Parthenocissus vitacea (not
P. inserta), as does ITIS and MissouriPlants.com, implying that woodbine and Virginia creeper are distinct species. Both woodbine and Virginia creeper have 40 chromosomes. Lu et al.’s (2012, 2023) molecular and morphological analyses indicate that woodbine and Virginia creeper are very closely related but are distinct species, and I’ll consider that to be correct here.