Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Boston Ivy

Parthenocissus tricuspidata

Description:

It is a deciduous woody vine growing to 30 m tall or more given suitable support, attaching itself by means of numerous small branched tendrils tipped with sticky disks. The leaves are simple, palmately lobed with three lobes, occasionally unlobed or with five lobes, or sufficiently deeply lobed to be palmately compound with (usually) three leaflets; the leaves range from 5–22 cm across. The flowers are inconspicuous, greenish, in clusters; the fruit is a small dark blue grape 5–10 mm diameter.

Habitat:

Distillery District, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Notes:

The plant secretes calcium carbonate, which serves as an adhesive pad and gives it the ability to attach itself to a wall without requiring any additional support. While it does not penetrate the building surface but merely attaches to it, nevertheless damage can occur from attempting to rip the plant from the wall. However, if the plant is killed first, such as by severing the vine from the root, the adhesive pads will eventually deteriorate to the point where the plant can be easily removed without causing any damage to the wall.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

2 Comments

yulia8473
yulia8473 12 years ago

Thanks, to me, leaves more alike with Boston Ivy than Virginia Creeper

Dan Doucette
Dan Doucette 12 years ago

I can't see the leaves well but I'm thinking its Boston Ivy or maybe Virginia Creeper.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boston_ivy

yulia8473
Spotted by
yulia8473

Toronto, Canada

Spotted on Jul 13, 2011
Submitted on Jul 13, 2011

Related Spottings

Virginia creeper Vinya verge Virginia Creeper Virginia Creeper

Nearby Spottings

Pansy: Orange Blue Plumbago Columbine: Purple Columbine: White
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team