(Redirected from Celastrus)
The 'staff vines', also known as 'staff trees' or 'bittersweet', genus '''Celastrus''', comprise about 30 species of
shrubs and
vines. They have a wide distribution in eastern
Asia,
Australasia,
Africa and
the Americas.

''Celastrus orbiculatus''
The leaves are alternate and simple ovoid, typically 5-20 cm long. The flowers are small, white, pink or greenish, and borne in long panicles; the fruit is a red three-valved berry. The fruit are eaten by frugivorous
birds, which disperse the seeds in their droppings. All parts of the plants are
poisonous to
humans if eaten.
In
North America, they are known as 'bittersweet', presumably a result of confusion with the unrelated
Bittersweet (''Solanum dulcamara'') by early colonists. ''C. orbiculatus'' is a serious
invasive weed in much of eastern North America.