|
Hog peanut (Amphicarpaea bracteata) |
Native vines bloom throughout the year, starting as early as
January in some years when the yellow flowers of
Gelsemium and the coral trumpets of
Lonicera open their earliest flowers. As summer winds down, a
flurry of white blooms appear on tangled roadsides. I thought it would be helpful to
mention four of the ones that you might see.
The first and showiest one to mention is Virgin’s bower (
Clematis virginiana). This clematis has
four petals in a flat arrangement (not a bell shape like most of
our other native clematis). These flowers mature to a crazy tangle of seeds with long
fuzzy tails that I find quite showy. The leaves are usually divided into 3
leaflets with
toothed edges. This vine is long, up to 20 feet, and vigorous;
it can really provide an eye-catching display over shrubs and small trees in
damp ditches.
|
Native virgin's bower (Clematis virginiana) |
|
The seed heads of Clematis virginiana (with pink flowers of
ground nut, Apios americana) |
|
Non-native Clematis terniflora with smooth edges on leaves |
A very similar but non-native clematis is sweet autumn
clematis (
Clematis terniflora). In
fact, the plants are so similar that I don’t know of a way to visually use the flowers to
tell them apart. The leaves are how you can discern the difference: the leaves
of this species are also often divided into leaflets (sometimes more than 3),
and the leaflets have
smooth edges with no teeth. Sometimes the leaflets also
have faint white markings.
A third white-blooming vine is climbing hempvine (
Mikania scandens). It is a member of the
Asteraceae family and an aggressive spreader. The leaves are
oppositely-arranged and heart-shaped. The small flowers are clustered together
(usually 4 per head) and are often white with slight tinges of pink or purple
once you look closely. Multiple heads are in a panicle arrangement.
This website has great photos. It also grows in damp areas and I have seen it on the
same roadside as Virgin’s bower clematis. A similar vine with heart-shaped
leaves is
climbing buckwheat (
Fallopia scandens). It has very distinctive
seeds.
|
Mikania scandens with Clematis virginiana in lower left |
|
Heart-shaped leaves of Mikania scandens (with pokeweed) |
Hog peanut is the fourth and last plant; it is perhaps not as noticeable since
the flowers can be rather modest and sparse. However, its foliage is persistent
and seems to be much longer than the stated 6-8 feet in length. Hog peanut (
Amphicarpaea bracteata) has thin stems
and trifoliate leaves. Very pale pink flowers, almost white, are 2 or more in
racemes which develop into seedpods like other bean family (Fabaceae) members.
The common name comes from the presence of ground-level flowers (self-pollinating)
that create single-seeded fleshy fruits that are edible. You can find
good pictures here. This vine is considered an annual in most areas.
|
Hog peanut (Amphicarpaea bracteata); see earlier photo in this blog also |
So there you have it, a collection of late summer-blooming
vines. Go out there, discover them, and figure out what they are! It makes
wandering around so much more interesting.
No comments:
Post a Comment