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Identifying Poison Ivy

Many people are accidentally poisoned each year from contact with plants they did not know were harmful. If they had known how to identify these plants, they could have escaped some painful skin irritations.

Poison ivy is known by many names because of its wide variation of appearance in different locations. Some poison ivy has heavy, rough, woody vines. Others are trailing shrubs that run on the ground or erect, woody shrubs.

The leaf shape varies on different plants as well as on the same plant. One thing remains the same: there are always three leaflets. Remember, leaflets three, let it be.

Flowers and fruit are always in clusters on slender stems that are attached to the branches where the leaves come out. The berries have a white, waxy appearance. After the leaves have shed, the waxy white berries are an easy way to identify poison ivy. Some poison ivy fruit looks like a peeled orange; others are hairy, and some are smooth.

There are two types of poison ivy in Mississippi. Oakleaf ivy has leaflets similar to white oak leaves. It is also known as poison oak. This form of ivy usually does not climb as a vine but is found as a low-growing shrub. Common poison ivy grows in many places as a shrub. It also grows as a vine in some localities.

Other vines are sometimes confused with poison ivy. These plants are Virginia creeper and some forms of Boston ivy. Neither of these vines is poisonous. You can recognize Virginia creeper by its five leaflets radiating from one point of attachment. (Leaves of five, let it thrive.) Boston ivy, with three leaflets, is hard to tell from its poisonous brother. The best policy to follow is to avoid plants and vines that look like poison ivy.

Poison sumac, a third member of the poison ivy family, is different because it usually is a shrub or even a small tree up to 25 feet tall. The leaves are 7 to 15 inches long and have 7 to 13 leaflets attached to a central stem. The berry of poison sumac is also ivory or white and formed in clusters. Poison sumac is usually found in permanently wet swamps or moist bottomlands. It is not as abundant as its two poisonous relatives -- poison ivy and poison oak.


Revised and distributed in Mississippi by Dean Stewart, Extension Wildlife Specialist

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Information Sheet 642
Extension Service of Mississippi State University, cooperating with
U.S. Department of Agriculture. Published in furtherance of Acts of Congress, May 8 and June 30, 1914. Ronald A. Brown, Director

Copyright by Mississippi State University. All rights reserved.

This document may be copied and distributed for nonprofit educational purposes provided that credit is given to the Mississippi State University Extension Service.
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