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Japanese honeysuckle

Lonicera japonica Thunb.

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Japanese honeysuckle twig pubescence
Japanese honeysuckle leaves
Japanese honeysuckle fruit
Japanese honeysuckle flowers/stem
Japanese honeysuckle leaves
Japanese honeysuckle stem
Japanese honeysuckle
Japanese honeysuckle leaves

Morphology

Trunk
Stems crawling or clambering; branches unarmed; often rooting adventitiously at nodes; bark yellowish brown to reddish brown, exfoliating in long strips; wood white, soft.
Twigs
Reddish brown, flexible, smooth, pubescent; leaf scars crescent-shaped; pith white; buds reddish brown, ovoid, .04 inch, apex acute, scales pubescent.
Leaves
Semipersistent, opposite, simple; petiole .08 to .43 inch, pubescent; blade ovate to oblong, 1.2 to 3.2 inches long, .6 to 1.2 inch wide, base wedge-shaped to rounded or truncate, margins entire, apex acute to obtuse, lower surfaces light green, pubescent at least along midvein, upper surfaces dark green, pubescent at least along midvein.
Flowers
Inflorescences small, few-flowered cymes, axillary on new growth, 2 per node, each 2-flowered; peduncle .2 to .6 inch; pedicels absent. Flowers bisexual, bilaterally symmetric; hypanthium ovoid, .06 to .08 inch; sepals 5, connate, lobes .05 to .08 inch; petals 5, connate, corolla white, often turning yellowish white with age, 2-lipped, pubescent with glandular hairs, tube not gibbous at base, 1 to 1.1 inch, pubescent internally, abaxial lip 1-lobed, adaxial lip 4-lobed, lobes .24 to .3 inch; stamens 5, exserted; pistil 1, ovary inferior, 2-3-locular; style 1, 1.6 to 1.8 inches, pubescent; stigma capitate.
Fruit
October-November; berries, black, globose to more or less ellipsoid, .2 to .3 inch diam., smooth, glabrous; seeds 4-10, brown to black, ovoid, .08 to .13 inch long, finely honeycombed, longitudinally 1-ridged.

Ecology

Habitat
Woodlands, forests, thickets, urban woodlots, roadsides, fencerows.
Distribution
Principally east 1/3 of Kansas

Additional Notes

Comments

Lonicera japonica is native to eastern Asia. It is an aggressive weed in parts of eastern Kansas, often clambering over shrubs and small trees. Japanese honeysuckle is legally noxious in four New England states. It affects native plants by outcompeting them for light, water, and nutrients. The flowers are sweet-scented and usually abundant, but the fruit set is low compared to the number of flowers produced (Stephens 1973). The leaves are semipersistent, with some remaining green through most or all of the winter.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Caprifoliaceae - Honeysuckle Family
Height
Vines to 32 feet
Last Updated
2019-09-10
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: April, May, June