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Author Topic: The three bittersweet plants  (Read 177 times)
Nestor Darrius
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« on: January 05, 2011, 07:27:04 AM »

There are many people who wish to get a proper direction to decide which the right bittersweet vine is and which all are destructive and are to be destroyed.  In Sydney people get the help of property inspections Sydney pest and building inspection experts do for them so that they will get the right information on these matters. Usually people in the eastern and central U.S commonly identify three plants as bittersweet. They are false bittersweet (Celastrus scandens), Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus) and bittersweet nightshade (Solanum dulcamara). The first kind of bittersweet named as false bittersweet or American bittersweet is not a destructive plant. Also, this is not an invasive plant. Landscapers consider it a fortune to have false bittersweet on their landscape because this plant is having great fall foliage.

The second type of bittersweet plant which is named as Oriental bittersweet is considered to be a plant that is to be feared. This is why because, though this plant is very beautiful, is destructive and is very difficult to be eradicated from the yard. This is considered to be one of the worst of North America’s exotic invasive plants. These plants spread underground via rhizomes and in this way it is similar to Japanese knotweed. The third type of bittersweet plant is bittersweet nightshade which is not related to other two bittersweet plants. These plants also are pretty but are poisonous. This bittersweet plant is considered to be the true bittersweet plant by the landscapers and is favored by birdwatchers because of its berries which are a favorite food source for birds in the winter season
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