Can
you identify what's in this photo?
Each Wednesday morning
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
the Lutherlyn Environmental
Education Program posts a photo.
Readers
have all morning and afternoon
to
make their best guess about what the photo is.
Around
6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.
Each
week's What is it Wednesday post
will
also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog,
after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes
with additional bonus information.
In
addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday
on the
Nature of Lutherlyn blog,
we
will be reposting old editions,
creating
a What is it Wednesday archive.
This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
December 2, 2020.
And the answer is....
Bittersweet is one of the prettiest and most destructive invasive plants we have at Lutherlyn. It was imported from Asia in the 1860’s as a decorative domestic vine, and quickly began spreading out of gardens into forests, fields, and roadsides. It grows quickly up trees and shrubs, twining thick woody vines around trunks and branches and making it difficult for the native plants to grow and thrive.
Birds eat the prolific crops of berries, which furthers the
spread of the vine when the seeds are dropped near and far with their own
fertilizer.
When we find bittersweet we try to remove it, but there is
so much of it, it is impossible to keep up. So, we try to control it as best we
can in the most vulnerable or important places, and enjoy the beauty its bright
berries and twining vines bring where it is beyond our control. It is
especially striking in the drab days of winter or against a stark white
background of snow!
Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on
Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when
they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!
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