kudzu vine

kudzu vine
/kood"zooh/
a fast-growing Chinese and Japanese climbing vine, Pueraria lobata, of the legume family, now widespread in the southern U.S., having tuberous, starchy roots and stems: used for fiber, as food and forage, and to prevent soil erosion. Also called kudzu.
[1900-05; < Japn kuzu, earlier kudu, of uncert. orig.]

* * *

Fast-growing, twining, perennial, woody vine (Pueraria lobata, or P. thunbergiana) belonging to the pea family (see legume).

Transplanted from its native China and Japan to North America in the 1870s as an attractive ornamental that could be planted on steep soil banks to prevent erosion, kudzu has become a rampant weed in much of the southeastern U.S, where it readily spreads to form great canopies over trees, shrubs, and exposed soil. Roots survive even northern winters, and the hairy vine grows to a length of 60 ft (18 m) in one season. It has large leaves, late-blooming reddish-purple flowers, and flat, hairy seedpods. In its native range kudzu is grown for its edible, starchy roots and for a fiber made from its stems. It is also useful as a fodder or cover crop.

* * *

plant
 (Pueraria lobata, or P. thunbergiana), twining perennial vine that is a member of a genus belonging to the family Leguminosae. The kudzu is a fast-growing, woody, somewhat hairy vine that may grow to a length of 18 m (60 feet) in one season. It has large leaves, long racemes with late-blooming reddish purple flowers, and flat, hairy seed pods. The plant is native to China and Japan, where it was long grown for its edible, starchy roots and for a fibre made from its stems. The kudzu was transplanted to North America with the intention of using it to anchor steep banks of soil and thereby prevent erosion. The plant has become a rampant weed in parts of the southeastern United States, however, since it readily spreads over trees and shrubs as well as exposed soil. The kudzu vine is a useful fodder crop for livestock, however, as well as an attractive ornamental. Northern winters tend to kill the plant's stems but allow the roots to survive.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • kudzu vine — noun fast growing vine from eastern Asia having tuberous starchy roots and hairy trifoliate leaves and racemes of purple flowers followed by long hairy pods containing many seeds; grown for fodder and forage and root starch; widespread in the… …   Useful english dictionary

  • kudzu vine — species of climbing vine that originated in China and Japan (now widely cultivated in the United States for fodder, fiber, and as a means of preventing erosion) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Kudzu — For other uses, see Kudzu (disambiguation). Kudzu Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae …   Wikipedia

  • kudzu — n. kudzu vine, fast growing vine of the legume family …   English contemporary dictionary

  • kudzu — n. (in full kudzu vine) a quick growing climbing plant, Pueraria thunbergiana, with reddish purple flowers. Etymology: Jap. kuzu …   Useful english dictionary

  • Kudzu (comic strip) — Kudzu was a daily comic strip created by Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist Doug Marlette about rural Southerners. The strip s name comes from the vine which, though initially encouraged as a soil erosion control plant, soon became an… …   Wikipedia

  • Kudzu (disambiguation) — Kudzu can refer to:*Kudzu, the vine *Kudzu (comic strip) *Kudzu (Software), the Red Hat Linux hardware probing library *Kudzu.com, (Consumer Search Service) …   Wikipedia

  • kudzu — ☆ kudzu [kood′zo͞o΄ ] n. 〚Jpn〛 a fast growing, hairy perennial vine (Pueraria lobata) of the pea family, with large, three part leaves: sometimes planted in the South for soil stabilization or forage * * * kud·zu (ko͝odʹzo͞o) n. An eastern Asian… …   Universalium

  • kudzu — ☆ kudzu [kood′zo͞o΄ ] n. [Jpn] a fast growing, hairy perennial vine (Pueraria lobata) of the pea family, with large, three part leaves: sometimes planted in the South for soil stabilization or forage …   English World dictionary

  • Vine — This article is about the term vine in its broad sense. For grapevines, see Vitis. For other uses, see Vine (disambiguation). A tendril …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”