Spreading Euonymus Euonymus fortunei
Other Common Name(s):
Previously known as:
- Euonymus kiautschovicus
- Phonetic Spelling
- yoo-ON-ih-mus for-TOO-nee-eye
- This plant has low severity poison characteristics.
- See below
- Description
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Climbing Euonymus is an evergreen woody vine or sprawling shrub. The juvenile form is a procumbent, vine-like groundcover; and the adult form is a shrub. In nature, it can often be found in woods and thickets in the low mountains of its native Japan. Some cultivars (see list) may be more of a vine and others more of a small shrub, but keep in mind that the vining cultivars and some shrubs can both be invasive. Climbing Euonymus readily escapes into native forests and has no trouble dominating medium-sized trees. Climbing Euonymus is listed as invasive in North Carolina and in other states of the southeast and northeast. When used as ground cover for the showy leaves, it tends to climb if given support. As a woody vine, this plant can form new rootlets when its branches contact moist soil. In addition, when this vine climbs trees, it produces aerial rootlets along its branches. As it reaches the tops of trees or a structure it is climbing, the plant will then become a flowering and fruiting plant which increases its invasive tendencies by producing seeds. This plant is frequently damaged by deer and is salt tolerant.
There are no records of toxicity for this species of Euonymus; however, a number of plants in this genus are poisonous and caution is advised. Avoid eating any parts of this plant in large quantities. The berries in particular should not be eaten by humans. The berries are eaten by some birds, which is how the plant is spread and often how it becomes more invasive.
The size of Creeping Euonymus is variable and it may grow to 6 feet high as a shrub or spread to 20 feet as a branching woody vine supported by a wall, tree, or trellis. As a groundcover, it can be kept to several inches tall, trimmed to two to four feet as a small shrub, or kept around 15 feet as a standard vine on a trellis. The vine can reach over 60 feet if growing up a tree towards sunlight. The sub species E. fortunei radicans is particularly useful, as are the cultivars 'Emerald and Gold', 'Emerald Gaiety', 'Coloratus', and 'Kewensis.
The leaves are semi-evergreen to evergreen and do not display fall leaf color. Variegated, colored and green cultivars are available, with non-green forms tending to revert to green. The long-lasting fall berries have orange aril (pulp). Adult plants have unremarkable small quarter-inch flowers in the spring, usually greenish-white.
Creeping Euonymus prefers full sun to medium shade, moist to dry-mesic conditions, and soil containing loam, clay-loam, sand, and gravelly material. It tolerates heavy shade, is pH adaptable, and is easily transplanted from woody cuttings and tolerates a variety of soils other than wet ground.
Diseases, Insect Pests, and Other Plant Problems: Scale and winter leaf burn can be a problem. Susceptible to anthracnose, powdery mildew, aphids, and crown gall. This plant is listed as invasive by the NC Invasive Plant Council
The Clemson Cooperative Extension Home & Garden Information Center has a factsheet on common pests and diseases.
VIDEO created by Andy Pulte for “Landscape Plant Identification, Taxonomy and Morphology” a plant identification course offered by the Department of Plant Sciences, University of Tennessee.
- Profile Video:
- See this plant in the following landscape:
- Cultivars / Varieties:
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'Colorata'
- 'Emerald 'n' Gold'
- 'Kewensis'
- 'Longwood'
- 'Manhattan'
Better resistance to Euonymus scale
'Silver Queen'
- 'Sunspot'
Compact shrub form with thick green leaves with pronounced yellow centers. Leaves are prone to sport and revert. - var. radicans
Ground cover/climber with coarsely serrate leaves which turn purple in autumn. 'Emerald Gaiety'
Small leaves and non-showy flowers
Small, pale green flowers that attract bees - 'Emerald 'n' Gold'
- 'Colorata', 'Emerald Gaiety', 'Emerald 'n' Gold', 'Kewensis', 'Longwood', 'Manhattan', 'Silver Queen', 'Sunspot', var. radicans
- Tags:
- Cultivars / Varieties:
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'Colorata'
- 'Emerald 'n' Gold'
- 'Kewensis'
- 'Longwood'
- 'Manhattan'
Better resistance to Euonymus scale
'Silver Queen'
- 'Sunspot'
Compact shrub form with thick green leaves with pronounced yellow centers. Leaves are prone to sport and revert. - var. radicans
Ground cover/climber with coarsely serrate leaves which turn purple in autumn. 'Emerald Gaiety'
Small leaves and non-showy flowers
Small, pale green flowers that attract bees - 'Emerald 'n' Gold'
- 'Colorata', 'Emerald Gaiety', 'Emerald 'n' Gold', 'Kewensis', 'Longwood', 'Manhattan', 'Silver Queen', 'Sunspot', var. radicans
- Tags:
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Attributes:
- Genus:
- Euonymus
- Species:
- fortunei
- Family:
- Celastraceae
- Life Cycle:
- Perennial
- Woody
- Recommended Propagation Strategy:
- Seed
- Stem Cutting
- Country Or Region Of Origin:
- East Asia, China, Japan, and Korea.
- Distribution:
- Introduced to the Eastern United States.
- Wildlife Value:
- birds are attracted to the seeds in the fall.
- Play Value:
- Attractive Flowers
- Wildlife Food Source
- Particularly Resistant To (Insects/Diseases/Other Problems):
- Salt
- Climbing Method:
- Twining
- Edibility:
- Toxic when ingested in large quantities.
- Dimensions:
- Height: 14 ft. 0 in. - 32 ft. 0 in.
- Width: 2 ft. 0 in. - 10 ft. 0 in.
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Whole Plant Traits:
- Plant Type:
- Ground Cover
- Perennial
- Poisonous
- Shrub
- Vine
- Woody Plant Leaf Characteristics:
- Broadleaf Evergreen
- Semi-evergreen
- Habit/Form:
- Climbing
- Dense
- Horizontal
- Mounding
- Multi-stemmed
- Prostrate
- Rounded
- Spreading
- Growth Rate:
- Rapid
- Maintenance:
- High
- Texture:
- Medium
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Cultural Conditions:
- Light:
- Dappled Sunlight (Shade through upper canopy all day)
- Full sun (6 or more hours of direct sunlight a day)
- Partial Shade (Direct sunlight only part of the day, 2-6 hours)
- Soil Texture:
- Clay
- High Organic Matter
- Loam (Silt)
- Sand
- Shallow Rocky
- Soil pH:
- Acid (<6.0)
- Alkaline (>8.0)
- Neutral (6.0-8.0)
- Soil Drainage:
- Good Drainage
- Moist
- Occasionally Dry
- Very Dry
- Available Space To Plant:
- 3 feet-6 feet
- 6-feet-12 feet
- NC Region:
- Coastal
- Mountains
- Piedmont
- USDA Plant Hardiness Zone:
- 4a, 4b, 5a, 5b, 6a, 6b, 7a, 7b, 8a, 8b, 9a, 9b
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Fruit:
- Fruit Color:
- Orange
- Pink
- Red/Burgundy
- White
- Fruit Value To Gardener:
- Showy
- Display/Harvest Time:
- Fall
- Fruit Type:
- Capsule
- Fruit Length:
- < 1 inch
- Fruit Width:
- < 1 inch
- Fruit Description:
- Fertile flowers are replaced by seed capsules that become mature during the autumn. Mature seed capsules are white, globoid, and about ¼ inch across. Eventually, they split open to reveal fleshy arils that are orange to red; solitary seeds occurs within these arils.
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Flowers:
- Flower Color:
- Green
- White
- Flower Inflorescence:
- Cyme
- Insignificant
- Flower Value To Gardener:
- Fragrant
- Showy
- Flower Bloom Time:
- Summer
- Flower Shape:
- Dome
- Star
- Flower Petals:
- 4-5 petals/rays
- Flower Size:
- < 1 inch
- Flower Description:
- Small, greenish white flowers. The flower is about 1/4 inch with four petals which may be dome shaped or flat. Flowers develop from the axils of mature leaves; their peduncles (basal stalks) are up to 4" long, while their pedicels are up to ½" long. Both peduncles and pedicels are light green, hairless, and terete. The blooming period occurs during the summer for about 3 weeks.
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Leaves:
- Woody Plant Leaf Characteristics:
- Broadleaf Evergreen
- Semi-evergreen
- Leaf Color:
- Gray/Silver
- Green
- White
- Leaf Feel:
- Leathery
- Smooth
- Leaf Type:
- Simple
- Leaf Arrangement:
- Opposite
- Leaf Shape:
- Elliptical
- Oblong
- Ovate
- Leaf Margin:
- Crenate
- Serrate
- Hairs Present:
- No
- Leaf Length:
- 1-3 inches
- Leaf Width:
- 1-3 inches
- Leaf Description:
- Paired evergreen leaves with broad, shallow, or rounded teeth; dark green and silvery white vein either on edge or mid-leaf. Opposite, simple, ovate-elliptic, 1 to 3 inches long and 3/4 to 1 1/2 inches across, crenate-serrate, thinly coriaceous. Often discolors in winter. Leaves occur at intervals along the young shoots; densely distributed and rather leathery in texture. The leaf tips are acute to blunt, while the leaf bases are rounded, truncate, or cuneate (wedge-shaped). The upper side of leaves is medium to dark green, hairless, and usually shiny, while the lower side of leaves is more pale, hairless, and dull. On shoots with immature leaves, the latter are often conspicuously whitened along the central and lateral veins; flowers and fruits are not produced on such shoots. On shoots with mature leaves, the latter are less whitened or green along the central and lateral veins; these shoots usually produce flowers and fruits.
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Bark:
- Bark Color:
- Dark Brown
- Dark Gray
- Bark Description:
- Gray-brown, thin, initially smooth.
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Stem:
- Stem Color:
- Green
- Red/Burgundy
- Stem Is Aromatic:
- No
- Stem Form:
- Zig Zags
- Stem Surface:
- Smooth (glabrous)
- Stem Description:
- Older branches become reddish brown, rough-textured, and woody, while young shoots are green, terete, glabrous, and rather stiff.
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Landscape:
- Attracts:
- Bees
- Songbirds
- Resistance To Challenges:
- Black Walnut
- Salt
- Problems:
- Poisonous to Humans
- Weedy
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Poisonous to Humans:
- Poison Severity:
- Low
- Poison Symptoms:
- Toxic if eaten in large quantities. Can cause vomiting, diarrhea, weakness, chills, coma, and convulsions.
- Poison Toxic Principle:
- Unidentified, possibly a glycoside
- Causes Contact Dermatitis:
- No
- Poison Part:
- Bark
- Flowers
- Fruits
- Leaves
- Roots
- Sap/Juice
- Seeds
- Stems