Dioscorea alatawinged yamNon-Native to Florida |
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Winged yam (Dioscorea alata)
is another
non-native, invasive vine in Florida. It is closely related to air potato (Dioscorea
bulbifera). Covered with large leaves, it can quickly grow into
the tops of tall trees. Winged yam is known to have "disprupted natural-area plant communities,
particularly coastal hammocks in south Florida." Fairly large naturalized populations occur in
northern Florida.
This member of the yam family (Dioscoreaceae) produces edible underground tubers. (Though
most yams contain an acrid component, cooking makes them edible.) The large underground
tubers of winged yam can weigh up to 100 pounds. Like air potato, winged yam also produces
large numbers of aerial tubers, which are potato-like growths attached to the stems. These grow
into new plants. Dioscorea species are cultivated for their edible tubers in West
Africa where they are important commodities. Uncultivated forms (as in Florida) however are
reported to be bitter and even poisonous. Dioscorea varieties, containing the steroid
diosgenin, are a principal material used in the manufacture of birth-control
pills. Research has shown that winged yam has antifungal properties.
Winged yam is named after its "winged stem"
(wide ridges along the squarish stem). (D. bulbifera has a round stem.) Winged
yam has a winter dormant period when the stems die back to the ground. After dormancy, the
underground tubers give rise to stems which can quickly grow to 30 feet long. The vine's stem is herbaceous (not woody). The large
leaves are up to 8 inches long and are heart-shaped (cordate). The leaf blade's basal lobes are rounded, and its leaf veins radiate from a single point.
The leaves have long stems (petioles), and are opposite on the stem. (On D.
bulbifera, leaves are alternate on the stem.) Winged yam flowers hang in relatively long
clusters (panicles and spikes) up to 1 foot long. The fruit is a 3-part capsule of
winged seeds. Winged yam plants produce aerial tubers that are
attached closely to the stems where leaves attach to the stem (axil). These aerial tubers are
greyish-brown and somewhat irregular with a rough, bumpy surface. In addition to the aerial
tubers, edible underground tubers may weigh up to 100 pounds.
View more information and pictures about the winged yam vine, as contained in
the
Langeland/Burks book, Identification & Biology of Non-Native Plants in Florida's Natural
Areas. See the UF/IFAS Assessment lists plants according to their invasive status in Florida.
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