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Smilax pumila Walter
SARSPARILLA VINE
Sarsaparilla-Vine

Life   Plantae   Monocotyledoneae   Smilacaceae   Smilax

Smilax pumila
© Copyright Bobby Hattaway 2011 · 5
Smilax pumila

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FamilyScientific name @ source (records)
Botryosphaeriaceae  Phyllosticta smilacina @ BPI (1)
Miridae  Orthotylus sp_ms_lepidothrix @ AMNH_PBI (1)

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FNA Vol. 26 Page 470, 476 Login | eFloras Home | Help
FNA | Family List | FNA Vol. 26 | Smilacaceae | Smilax

16. Smilax pumila Walter, Fl. Carol. 244. 1788.

Sarsaparilla vine

Smilax humilis Miller, name proposed for rejection; S. pubera Michaux; S. puberula Kunth

Subshrubs or vines; rhizomes black, knotted, 5—6 × 2 cm, often with white to pinkish stolons. Stems perennial, prostrate to clambering, branching, slender, to 1 m, ± woody, densely woolly-pubescent, usually prickly (especially at base). Leaves mostly evergreen, ± evenly disposed; petiole 0.05—0.25 cm, often longer on sterile shoots; blade gray-green, drying to ashy gray-green, obovate to ovate-lanceolate, with 3 prominent veins, 6—10.5 × 5—8 cm, glabrous adaxially, densely puberulent abaxially, base cordate to deeply notched, margins entire, apex bluntly pointed. Umbels 1—7, axillary to leaves, 5—16-flowered, loose, spherical; peduncle 0.2—0.8 cm, shorter than to 1.5 as long as petiole of subtending leaf. Flowers: perianth yellowish; tepals 3—4 mm; anthers much shorter than filaments; ovule 1 per locule; pedicel thin, 0.1—0.4 cm. Berries red, ovoid, 5—8 mm, with acute beaks, not glaucous.

Flowering Oct--Nov. Woods, along streams, sandy soil; Ala., Ark., Fla., Ga., La., Miss., S.C., Tex.

The red, pointed fruits and densely pubescent herbage of Smilax pumila are distinctive. In Louisiana, the dried leaves are used to prepare a tea for upset stomach.

The name Smilax humilis Miller, which predates S. pumila by 20 years and recently has been determined to apply also to this species, has been proposed for rejection (J. L. Reveal 2000). If that proposal is not adopted, the correct name will be S. humilis.

Updated: 2024-05-02 14:32:48 gmt
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