Chinese yam USDA PLANTS Symbol: DIOP
U.S. Nativity: Exotic
Habit: Vine
Dioscorea polystachya Turcz.

Chinese yam is an herbaceous, twining vine that is often found climbing. It invades open to shady areas in the eastern United States. The leaves resemble greenbrier leaves. They are alternate or opposite, 8 in. (20.3 cm) long, wide, long petiolate, heart to fiddle-shaped with prominent, parallel veins. Leaves are usually more rounded when young or on young plants and fiddle-shaped farther along the stem and on older plants. The rounded stems are thin and wiry. The chief means of reproduction are by aerial potato-like tubers (bulbils) located at the leaf axils and by underground tubers. The vine rarely flowers. Chinese yam can form dense masses of vines that cover and kill native vegetation including trees within a variety of moist disturbed habitats. It was introduced from Asia for ornamental, food, and medicinal purposes and escaped cultivation in the mid 1990s.

Identification, Biology, Control and Management Resources

Selected Images from Invasive.orgView All Images at Invasive.org


Plant(s);
Great Smoky Mountains National Park Resource Management Archive, USDI National Park Service, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Plant(s);
Troy Evans, Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Foliage; July
James H. Miller, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Feature(s); Aerial tubers and foliage
Jack Ranney, University of Tennessee, Bugwood.org
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Foliage;
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Feature(s); aerial tubers
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Fruit(s); aerial tubers
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Foliage;
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Infestation;
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Infestation;
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Infestation;
Chris Evans, River to River CWMA, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

Seed(s);
Steve Hurst, USDA NRCS PLANTS Database, Bugwood.org
Additional Resolutions & Image Usage

EDDMapS Distribution: