Dictionary Definition
ivy n : Old World vine with lobed evergreen
leaves and black berrylike fruits [syn: common ivy,
English
ivy, Hedera
helix]
User Contributed Dictionary
Pronunciation
- , /ˈaɪvi/, /"aIvi/
- Rhymes with: -aɪvi
Derived terms
Translations
plant
university in the Ivy League
- ttbc Chinese: 常春藤 (chángchūnténg)
- ttbc Romanian: iederă
- ttbc Slovak: brečtan
- ttbc Spanish: hiedra
- ttbc Welsh: eiddew, iorwg
See also
Extensive Definition
Hedera (English name ivy, plural ivies) is a
genus of 15 species of climbing or ground-creeping evergreen woody plants in the
family Araliaceae,
native to the Atlantic
Islands, western, central and southern Europe, northwestern
Africa and
across central-southern Asia east to Japan. On suitable
surfaces (trees and
rock
faces), they are able to climb to at least 25–30 metres above the basal ground
level.
They have two leaf types, with palmately lobed juvenile leaves
on creeping and climbing stems, and unlobed cordate adult leaves on
fertile flowering stems exposed to full sun, usually high in the
crowns of trees or the top of rock faces. The juvenile and adult
shoots also differ, the former being slender, flexible and
scrambling or climbing with small roots to affix the shoot to the
substrate (rock or tree bark), the latter thicker, self-supporting,
and without roots. The flowers are produced in late
autumn, individually small, in 3–5 cm diameter umbels,
greenish-yellow, and very rich in nectar, an important late food
source for bees and other
insects; the fruit are
small black berries ripening in late winter, and are an important
food for many birds, though
poisonous to humans. The
seeds are dispersed by
birds eating the fruit. The leaves are eaten by the larvae of some species of Lepidoptera
such as Angle
Shades,
Lesser Broad-bordered Yellow Underwing, Scalloped
Hazel, Small
Angle Shades, Small
Dusty Wave (which feeds exclusively on ivy), Swallow-tailed
Moth and Willow
Beauty.
Taxonomic note
The species are largely allopatric and closely related, and all have on occasion been treated as varieties or subspecies of H. helix, the first species described. Several additional species have been described in the southern parts of the former Soviet Union, but are not regarded as distinct by most botanists.Uses and cultivation
Ivies are very popular in cultivation within their native range, both for attracting wildlife, and for their evergreen foliage; many cultivars with variegated foliage and/or unusual leaf shape have been selected. They are particularly valuable for covering unsightly walls.Ivies have however proved to be a serious
invasive
weed in the parts of
North
America where winters are not severe, and their cultivation
there is now discouraged in many areas. Similar problems exist in
Australia
where the plant was originally cultivated in gardens. For example,
in the coastal basins of California
drought-tolerant Algerian ivy (H. algeriensis or H. canariensis)
has been planted as a ground cover around buildings and highways,
but it has become an invasive weed in coastal forests, and riparian
areas.
Much has been argued as to whether ivy climbing
trees will harm the tree or not; the consensus in Europe is that
they do not harm trees significantly, though they may compete for
ground nutrients and water to a small extent, and trees with a
heavy growth of ivy can be more liable to windthrow. Problems are
greater in North America, where trees may be overwhelmed by the ivy
to the extent they are killed; this could be because ivy in North
America, being introduced, is without the natural pests and
diseases that control its vigour in its native areas. A more
serious problem is that ivy creates a vigorous, dense,
shade-tolerant evergreen groundcover (precisely the characteristics
for which it is often cultivated) that can spread over large areas
and outcompete native vegetation. Similar concerns are expressed
about damage to walls. It is generally considered that a soundly
mortared wall is impenetrable to the climbing roots of ivy and will
not be damaged, and is also protected from further weathering by
the ivy keeping rain off the mortar.
Walls with already weak or loose mortar may however be badly
damaged, as the ivy is able to root into the weak mortar and
further break up the wall. Subsequent removal of the ivy can be
difficult, and is likely to cause more damage than the ivy itself.
Modern mortars that contain portland
cement and little lime are stronger than older mortar mixes
that were largely composed of just sand and lime. Most mortar mixes
changed to contain portland cement in the 1930s. Soft mortar is
still used when laying softer brick.
Regional English names for ivy include Bindwood
and Lovestone (for the way it clings and grows over stones and
brickwork).
Toxicity
Although far less toxic than poison ivy, which is unrelated to this genus, ivy contains triterpenoid saponins and falcarinol, a polyyne. Falcarinol is capable of inducing an allergic reaction (contact dermatitis), although it has been shown to kill breast cancer cells as well.Gallery
See also
- Poison ivy - unrelated to this genus
- Boston ivy - also cultivated and may grow up walls
- List of air-filtering plants
References
- McAllister, H. (1982). New work on ivies. Int. Dendrol. Soc. Yearbook 1981: 106-109.
ivy in Arabic: حبل المساكين
ivy in Danish: Vedbend-slægten
ivy in German: Efeu (Gattung)
ivy in Spanish: Hedera
ivy in Esperanto: Hedero
ivy in French: Hedera
ivy in Korean: 아이비
ivy in Italian: Hedera
ivy in Hebrew: קיסוס
ivy in Luxembourgish: Wantergréng
ivy in Hungarian: Borostyán
ivy in Dutch: Hedera
ivy in Japanese: キヅタ属
ivy in Polish: Bluszcz
ivy in Russian: Плющ
ivy in Finnish: Muratit
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
aestival, algae, autophyte, bean, beryl-green, berylline, blue-green,
bluish-green, bracken,
brown algae, chartreuse, chloranemic, chlorine, chlorotic, citrine, citrinous, climber, conferva, confervoid, creeper, diatom, emerald, fern, foliaged, fruits and
vegetables, fucus,
fungus, glaucescent, glaucous, glaucous-green,
grapevine, grassy, green, green algae, green as
grass, green-blue, greenish, greenish-blue,
greenish-yellow, greensick, gulfweed, herb, heterophyte, holly, ivy-green, kelp, leafy, leaved, legume, lentil, liana, lichen, liverwort, mold, moss, mushroom, olivaceous, olive, olive-green, parasite, parasitic plant,
pea, perthophyte, phytoplankton, planktonic
algae, plant families, porraceous, puffball, pulse, red algae, rockweed, rust, saprophyte, sargasso, sargassum, sea lentil, sea
moss, sea wrack, seaweed, smaragdine, smut, springlike, succulent, summerlike, summery, toadstool, verdant, verdurous, vernal, vernant, vert, vetch, vine, virescent, wort, wrack,
yellowish-green