Skip to main content

Pigeon grape

Vitis aestivalis Michx.

Images

Click on image to view full size

Pigeon grape inflorescences
Pigeon grape leaves
Pigeon grape bark
Pigeon grape
Pigeon grape leaf
Pigeon grape leaf undersurface
Pigeon grape habit

Morphology

Trunk
Stems climbing or clambering; branches unarmed, tips not enveloped by unfolding leaves, tendrils persistent, usually branched, sometimes simple; bark brown, exfoliating in long, thin strips; wood white, soft.
Twigs
Reddish brown to purplish brown, flexible, glabrous; leaf scars crescent-shaped; pith brown; buds ovoid, .16 to .24 inch, apex obtuse to acute, scales glabrate.
Leaves
Deciduous, alternate, simple; petiole 3.2 to 4.8 inches, glabrous or floccose to arachnoid and hirtellous usually with rusty or rarely white hairs; blade cordate to orbiculate, 2.8 to 10 inches long, 1.6 to 10 inches wide, base cordate, margins irregularly and coarsely dentate, unlobed or deeply 3- to 5-lobed, apex acute, lower surfaces grayish green or light green, glabrate or floccose to arachnoid and hirtellous with rusty or rarely white hairs, glaucous, upper surfaces green, glabrous or glabrate.
Flowers
Inflorescences opposite leaves on new growth, thyrses, 15-150-flowered, spreading or lax, 2 to 8 inches; peduncle .4 to 2.8 inches, floccose, glabrescent; pedicels .12 to .16 inch, glabrous. Flowers dioecious; unisexual, radially symmetric; sepals 5, connate, lobes green, reduced to an obscure rim; petals 5, connate distally, white, oblong to elliptic, .09 to .1 inch; staminate: stamens 5, to .12 inch; pistillate: pistil 1, ovary superior, 2-locular; style 1; stigma 1, lobed.
Fruit
August-September; berries, dark purple to black, globose, .3 to .7 inch diam., smooth, glaucous, glabrous, flesh not milky; seeds 2-4, reddish brown, broadly ovoid, .24 to .26 inch long, .16 to .2 inch wide, smooth.

Ecology

Habitat
Dry, rocky upland forests and woodlands, thickets, bluffs, fencerows, ravines, stream banks.
Distribution
East 1/6 of Kansas

Practical Information

Uses
The Cherokee and Choctaw tribes used various parts of the plant to treat a variety of maladies, and the Cherokee used the fruits for food and as a beverage (Moerman 1998).

Additional Notes

Comments

Leaf vestiture varies greatly among plants, sometimes within populations. Vitis aestivalis is occasionally confused with V. cinerea; the former has leaves that are abaxially glaucous and usually with rusty hairs (vs. abaxially not glaucous and usually with white hairs) and larger and more strongly glaucous fruits; it generally occurs in drier, better-drained sites.

Quick Facts
Plant Type
Tree
Family
Vitaceae - Grape Family
Height
Vines to 33 feet long
Origin
Native
Last Updated
2019-09-08
Flowering Period
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

Blooms: May, June