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Lehigh Valley Live on MSNStaghorn sumac vs. poison sumac: How to identify the difference | Lehigh Valley Nature Watch
While staghorn sumac produces edible red blossoms commonly seen along roadsides, its dangerous cousin poison sumac contains ...
While we are plagued with many of these look-alikes annually, it seems this season we have even more. Learning how to ...
Poison ivy, poison oak and poison sumac can make for an uncomfortable summer or fall. If you have ever experienced the blisters, swelling and intense itching of even the briefest of encounters ...
Answer: Poison ivy, poison oak and poison sumac are problem plants for many people who encounter them in the woods, but most people are surprised to find them in their own gardens. Birds often ...
Poison Sumac (Toxicodendron vernix) Toxicodendron vernix (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons). What it looks like: Poison sumac plants grow like small trees in wet, muddy soil. Its stems ...
Identifying the culprit Poison ivy can grow as a self-supporting erect woody shrub, but its usual growth habit is as a slender vine running along the ground or growing on trees, shrubs and even ...
Many times, gardeners are unaware of the presence of poison ivy in their landscape until it's too late.
Poison sumac (Toxicodendron vernix) Toxicodendron vernix (Public domain image from Wikimedia Commons). What it looks like: Poison sumac plants grow like small trees in wet, muddy soil. Its stems ...
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