The Poison Ivy plant is a parent to many other familiar poisonous plants. Sumac and poison sumac are cousins to the poison ivy plant, also said that the cashew plant is part of the family too.
Poison ivy has in fact not ivy at all, it is a grape variety of wood which seems to look like ivy. In some parts of the United States, there is a type of poison ivy that resembles a shrub. However, it is a pest plant that you need to stay away. Have you ever heard the expression leaves of three, leave them be It is advice to follow when you are outdoors.
Three pointed leaflets with arrays in the environment, that is what the plant is composed of. Leaves are long, harassed the Middle sheet is largest of the three. Close where the leaf joins the stem, small yellowish flowers grow. These flowers later, the transformed into a cluster of bays, bays appear to be white coloured and are also toxic to human consumption. This plant is not always bad. Different types of animals such as deer feed on poison ivy berries. Many species of birds see the bays to be a delicacy. Poison ivy flowers usually in the middle of the spring in the summer. The berries appear each time to the middle of the summer to autumn.
The leaves and plants tend to vary in size and texture also differs, but still can be easily recognized. When out in the spring, the leaves are usually reddish coloured. In summer, they turn green. At some point the poison ivy leaves also saw a purple color. Shades of yellow, orange and Red occur in the fall, causing the plant appear beautiful shades, but remember, leaves of three, leave them be.
Oil found in Poison Ivy plant is called urushiol oil. Allergic reaction, itching and painful blisters is a result which come into contact with the poisonous plant. If oil is not instantly washed off the coast of the skin, you can propagate the worst eruption yet. Touching the contaminated part and another part of your body can spread throughout your skin oil, causing a painful reaction poisonous oil.
Usually, the poison Ivy plant is located in the South of the Canada and in most regions of the United States, except the West Coast. Primarily, the sumac is the plant that derives from the West Coast. These two poisonous plants are close and tend to be similar, so often times they become confused. Normally, the same symptoms occur with two of these plants.
Poison Ivy usually grows as a vine or shrub, depending on the region and climate, this a very thick weed that can spread easily if it is not contained or destroyed. With the help of many applications of herbicide can kill and stop the spread of the plant, although the withdrawal by the root is the best way to destroy it. If you choose to pull it, the easiest way is to do when the soil is wet.
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