In contrast, non-native “Oriental” bittersweet is aggressive. On ChicoryLane’s wooded hillside, non-native bittersweet strangles hardwood trees (photo, above) that have managed to break through the suffocating shrub layer of autumn olive, multiflora rose, and honeysuckle shrubs only to be brought down by bittersweet. Additionally, bittersweet seedlings carpet the shady ground in Spring and hoard available sunlight, stifling photosynthesis by tree seedlings.
The non-native is replacing the native at ChicoryLane and elsewhere. Birds spread the seeds. People have historically installed it along roadsides for erosion control, landscaped with it, and used its striking red fruits with yellow petals in dried flower arrangements. Confession: for years at ChicoryLane we encouraged a thick ”Oriental” bittersweet vine to climb on the woodshed. Graceful, fruity branches brightened our Thanksgiving dinner table. No longer. That woodshed vine has been cut down. As a conservation practice, now we spend hours in Fall cutting the vines at ground level, painting the stumps with herbicide, then spraying emergent growth in Spring to halt fruit-set.
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