Poison Sumac?

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Shaun Bowler

ArboristSite Operative
Joined
Jul 24, 2002
Messages
372
Reaction score
45
Location
CA.
My friend who lives in central Ill. thinks he ran into some PS. He said it smelled like mint. Th entire upper half of his body is stained. It reminds me of brindle colored dogs. He said no irritation, or very little. We don't have PS on the west coast. I thought it might be Virgina Creeper. Anybody know what it is?
 
Poison sumac is a tall bush that grows in stands and has white berries.

Toxicodendron vernix is not a "true" sumac, since it's not in the Rhus genus

tvernixleaf.jpg
 
non-poisonous sumac

Here is some info on a non-poisonous sumac...see site:

http://ncnatural.com/wildflwr/fall/sumac.html

It does not mention the smell...I know we have some sumac that grows in GA that isn't supposed to be poisonous. I used to quail hunt with a fellow that told me quail liked the berries. I remember the variety down here having a purplish/scarlet stem and it grew as a bush, maybe 3-5 feet high.

Maybe he got into this:

Staghorn Sumac

The large dark crimson - or rarely orange to yellow - pinnate leaves of this sumac have 15-31 narrow, ellipti to lanceolate, serrate leaflets that can be up to 15 cm (6") long. The stems and fruits of Staghorn Sumac are densely hairy, as in the "velvet stage" of a stag's antlers.

These colorful, nonpoisonous shrubs or small trees are rhizomatous. The large clumps form bright splashes of color along forest margins, road banks, and fencerows and in old fields over much of the Appalachians. Staghorn Sumac is rare or absent at lower elevations in the south.

Smooth Sumac (Rhus glabra) is a similar and more common Sumac often seen along highways. Poison Sumac (Rhus vernix) is a toxic cousin which usually grows in swamps, bogs, and low moist areas, often in the shade of taller trees. It is not as common as Poison Ivy, but the oil is stronger and produces a more painful irritation.
 
I have been watching this site for @ 3 years. I have been in the industry for @25 years.
I want to thank all of you for this place..
SB
 
Some more examples of the problems with the L. Taxonomic system :laugh:

Toxicodendron vernix (L.) Kuntze
Poison Sumac
ANACARDIACEAE

Synonyms
Rhus venenata (DC.) R. verni[H] R. vernicifera[E,H] R. verniciferum[G] R. verniciflua[E,H,HPIC,HORTIPLEX]
 

Latest posts

Back
Top