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. |