Common Name: Chinese yam
Family: Dioscoreaceae
Common Synonyms: Dioscorea oppositifolia
USDA Hardiness Zone: 5b - 11
Growth Habit: Vine
Origin: China
FISC Category: -
FDACS Listed Noxious Weed: No
Introduction Date: introduced in US 1800's, Florida introduction date unknown
IFAS Assessment:
Creeping and climbing vine up to 5 m in height, climbing over trees and shrubs. Leaves alternate or opposite, acute with heart-shaped base, 4-8 cm long. Clustered flowers fragrant, small, yellow-white, bell-shaped in leaf axils. Aerial tubers (bulbils) 0.7-3.0 cm long covered with adventitious buds form in leaf axils in late summer.
Rich soils along streams, creeks, and rivers, disturbed sites
Only vouchered from Alachua Co. Established in mid-Atlantic, KY, TN, etc. Climate may limit spread to FL.
NA
Dave's Garden. 2013. PlantFiles: Chinese wild yam, cinnamon vine, Dioscorea oppositifolia. http://davesgarden.com/guides/pf/go/53822/. Accessed on December 9, 2013.
University of Georgia - Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health. 2013. BugwoodWiki: Chinese yam - Dioscorea oppositifolia. http://wiki.bugwood.org/Archive:SEEPPC/Chinese_Yam_-_Dioscorea_oppositifolia_L.. Accessed on December 9, 2013.