Clematis vitalba explained

Clematis vitalba (also known as old man's beard and traveller's joy) is a shrub of the family Ranunculaceae.

Description

Clematis vitalba is a climbing shrub with branched, grooved stems, deciduous leaves, and scented greeny-white flowers with fluffy underlying sepals. The many fruits formed in each inflorescence have long silky appendages which, seen together, give the characteristic appearance of old man's beard. The grooves along the stems of C. vitalba can easily be felt when handling the plant.

This species is eaten by the larvae of a wide range of moths. This includes many species which are reliant on it as their sole foodplant; including small emerald, small waved umber and Haworth's pug.

Range

C. vitalba has a preference for base rich alkaline soils and moist climate with warm summers. The species is native to Eurasia and North Africa.[1]

United Kingdom

In the UK it is a native plant and is common throughout England south of a line from the River Mersey and the River Humber. It also commonly occurs in southern, Eastern and northern Wales. Outside of these areas it is widely planted and occurs as far north as the southern highlands of Scotland.[2]

As an invasive species

Due to its disseminatory reproductive system, vitality, and climbing behavior, Clematis vitalba is an invasive plant in many places.[3] [4] The species is capable of rapid growth, climbing several times faster than English ivy, and each plant may produce in excess of 100,000 seeds. The plant may also spread through stem and root fragmentation.[5]

New Zealand

See main article: Old man's beard in New Zealand. In New Zealand it is declared an "unwanted organism" and is listed in the National Pest Plant Accord. It cannot be sold, propagated or distributed. It is a potential threat to native plants since it grows vigorously and forms a canopy which smothers all other plants and has no natural controlling organisms in New Zealand. New Zealand native species of Clematis have smooth stems and can easily be differentiated from C. vitalba by touch.

North America

In North America, old man's beard is considered an invasive species. It is found in Washington, Oregon, California, and British Columbia. The species is also found in the eastern United States.[1] The species was introduced as an ornamental plant in the Pacific Northwest sometime between 1950 and 1970.[5]

Characteristics

Diseases

C. vitalba suffers from tomato spotted wilt virus.[6]

Use

Clematis vitalba was used to make rope during the Stone Age in Switzerland.[7] In Slovenia, the stems of the plant were used for weaving baskets for onions and also for binding crops.[8] It was particularly useful for binding sheaves of grain because mice do not gnaw on it.[9] In Italy, the sprouts are harvested to make omelettes (called "vitalbini" in Tuscany, "visoni" in Veneto).

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Clematis vitalba . biology.burke.washington.edu . 10 October 2022.
  2. New Atlas of the British and Irish Flora
  3. Web site: Clematis vitalba Profile – California Invasive Plant Council . 2024-01-22 . en-US.
  4. Web site: Invasive Species Compendium . Clematis vitalba . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120401141920/http://www.cabi.org/isc/?compid=5&dsid=14280&loadmodule=datasheet&page=481&site=144 . 2012-04-01 . 2017-05-24.
  5. Web site: Old Man's Beard (Clematis vitalba) . portland.gov . Portland Bureau of Environmental Services . 10 October 2022.
  6. Web site: Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV00) . Global Database . EPPO (European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization) . 2002-11-26 . 2022-05-05.
  7. Johnson, Magnus. 2001. The genus Clematis. Södertälje: Magnus Johnsons Plantskola AB, p. 37.
  8. Petauer, Tomaž. 1993. Leksikon rastlinskih bogastev. Ljubljana: Tehniška založba Slovenije, p. 139.
  9. http://www.zaveza.si/index.php/revija-zaveza/100-zaveza-t-42 Kržan, Vanja. 2010. "Mi pa oznanjamo Kristusa, križanega (1 Kor 1,23)." Zaveza 42 (25 February).