I in Texas. Phytoneuron 2 Guy L. Nesom 2925 Hartwood Drive Fort Worth, TX 76109, USA www.guynesom.com ABSTRACT Euonymus fortunei is documented here for the first time to occur outside of cultivation in Texas. The population, which is perhaps a large clone spread from an original planting, is in Overton Park in the central part of Fort Worth. Flowers and fruits have not been observed. Color photos are included. KEY WORDS: Euonymus fortun ', i "el istiacea^ naturalized, Texas Euonymus fortunei (Turcz.) Hand.-Mazz. Winter creeper, climbing euonymus Texas. Tarrant Co.: Fort Worth, Overton Park near intersection of Owenwood Drive and Glenwood Drive, terrace bank on south side of Overton Creek, along 60 feet of embankment and covering ca. 600-800 square feet, apparently spread downslope from original plantings near a house ca. 50 feet above, in a thicket of Primus caroliniana, Photinia serratifolia, L igustrum lucidum. Ligustrum quihoui, Nandina domestica, under Ulmus crassifolia and young Bumeiia lanuginosa and Celtis laevigata, with Hedera helix, tlie euonymus also spreading out of the thicket into adjacent mowed areas, 18 May 2009, G.L. Nesom 2010-01 (BRIT, OKL, TEX, to be deposited). Euonymus fortunei is an evergreen, trailing or scandent subshrub native to southeastern Asia. At the Overton Park site, it densely covers the ground, intermixed in one area with Hedera helix, and has grown nearly 10 feet out of the thicket into grassy areas into a constantly mowed area. Internodal adventitious roots enable the spread, and it is likely that this entire 600-800 square feet of euonymus growth is a single large clone. On the main trunk of an elm in the canopy above the thicket, the euonymus has grown upward to about 8 feet — clusters of adventitious aerial roots keep stems tightly attached to the bark. One cluster of aerial stems, presumably the potentially reproductive branches, diverges outward from the trunk and lacks aerial roots. Winter creeper is very commonly cultivated as a ground cover in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and appears to flourish, through extreme heat and extreme cold, but it rarely has an opportunity to glow outside of manicured areas. Various sources note that it flowers only or usually when climbing and almost never when trailing along the ground. I have not seen it in flower in Texas, but photos on the Serviss (2009) web site show it in flower and heavy fruit in Arkansas and the distribution in 11 scattered counties in Tennessee (Chester et al. 2010; TEPPC 2009, listed as a "severe threat") suggests that it is successfully dispersing there beyond what could be expected simply through clonal spread. Serviss notes that "the species is "naturalized in Arkansas, seemingly more so in the northern portions of the state." Weakley (2009) notes that it is "rarely naturalized, as in bottomlands or sw r amps, where sometimes climbing into the canopy," and provides a key to nine species of Euonymus, six of which are non-native. Bottomlands and riparian habits also are characteristic of naturalized E. fortunei in eastern Kansas (Freeman & McGregor 1998). Spontaneous plants are noted to climb on walls and fences, into trees, and onto utility poles in cities of eastern Nebraska {Kaul et al. 2006). Euonymus fortunei (including E. kiautschovicus Loes., see synonyms below) is reported by the PLANTS Database (2009) from Ontario, Canada, 22 states in the eastern USA east of the Mississippi River, and 3 states west of the Mississippi (Arkansas, Kansas, and Missouri). The records are documented by various published and unpublished databases, checklists, floras, and personal communications. Notice by Kaul et al. (2006) of its occurrence in Nebraska apparently has not yet been picked up by national databases. It has not been recorded as naturalized in Louisiana or Oklahoma, but it seems likely that it could be found there, at least in situations similar to the one reported here for Texas. Other commentaries and information on Euonymus fortune! in the LISA are given in various invasive species web sites (e.g.. Miller 2003: Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health 2010). Detailed information on the species and a comprehensive set of references, covering the geographic extent, biology, invasiveness, and control measures, are provided by Zouhar (2009). All USA records for Euonymus fortune! in the PLANTS Database except two are identified as var. radicans (Sieb. ex Miq.) Render; var. fortune! is reported from Illinois, based on Mohlenbrock (1986), and from Massachusetts, based on an unpublished 1992 checklist by Bruce Sorrie. In the recent overview of Euonymus in China, Ma et al. (2008) treated E. fortune! without formal infraspecific variants, noting that "Numerous taxa have been named within the E. fortunei complex but many of these refer to cultivated plants and are best treated as cultivars." They also observed that it is "the most common and widespread species in the genus ... and is also the most complex and polymorphic." Dirr (1998) noted that it is "a variable species because it sports (mutates) so readily and the range of leaf types produced is almost endless." Dirr (1998) provided brief characterizations of 51 cultivars of the species, including "Coloratus" (purple-leaved winter creeper), sometimes referred to as "var. cohratus." This name, however, apparently does not exist at varietal rank, but Euonymus fortune! forma coloratus (Rehder) Rehder is validly published (see below). The form "differs only in the leaves assuming in autumn a purple color retained during the winter, a very dark deq3 purple on the upper and a brighter' and ligher purple on the lower surface" (Rehder 1938, p. 77). In the Flora of Nebraska (Kaul et al. 2006), the species was identified as Euonymus hederaceus Champ, ex Benth. (1851), a name now considered a synonym of E. fortunei but published earlier than Elaeodendron fortunei Turcz. (1863), the basionym for E. fortunei, LIse of E. hederaceus was correct in 2006, but the next year, 2007, formal conservation of the widely used E. fortunei was recommended by the Committee for Vascular Plants (Brummitt, Taxon 56: 1291. 2007), following a proposal for conservation by Cao and Ma (Taxon 55: 233. 2006). Synonymy of names commonly associated with Euonymus fortunei, as noted by Rehder (1940), Bailey (1945), Blakelock (1951), Bean (1973), and Ma et al. (2008), is given below. Many other synonyms are not included. Euonymus fortune! (Turcz.) Hand.-Mazz., Symb. Sin. 7(3): 660. 1933. Elaeodendron fortunei Turcz., Bull. Soc. Imp. Naturalistes de Moscou 26: 603, 1863, Conserved name. Type from China. Euonymus hederaceus Champion ex Benth. in Hook, Kew J. 3: 333. 1851. Name rejected against E. fortunei (Turcz.) Hancl-Mazz. Type from China. Euonymus japonicus var. radicans Sieb. ex Miquel, Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugduno-Batavum 2: 86. 1865. Euonymus radicans (Sieb. ex Miquel) Sieb, ex Hand-Mazz., Symb. Sin. 7(3): 660. 1933 [non (Miquel) Sieb. ex Mquel, Ann. Mus. Bot. Lugduno-Batavum 3: 202. 1876, in obs.]. Euonymus fortune: var. radicans (Sieb, ex Mquel) Render, J. Arnold Ait. 19: 77. 1938. Euonymus fortunei forma radicans (Sieb. ex Miquel) Render, Man. Cult, Trees (ed. 2), 559. 1940. Type from Japan. Euonymus carrierei Vauvel, Vulgaris Hort, No. 6. 1881 [Carriere, Rev. Hort, 373, fig. 92. 1881]. Euonymus radicans var. carrierei (Vauvel) G. Nichols., Hand-list Trees Shrubs Kew 1: 67. 1894. Euonymus japonicus var. carrierei (Vauvel) G. Nichols. & Mottet, Diet. Hort. Jard. 2: 351. 1894. Euonymus fortunei forma carrierei (Vauvel) Rehder, .1. Arnold Arbor. 19: 79. 1938. Type cultivated, from China? Euonymus kiautschovicus Loes. in Engl. Jahrb. 30: 453. 1902. Type from China. E'uonymus radicans var. vegetus Rehder in Sargent, Trees & Shrubs 1(3): 129, pi. 65. 1903. Euonymus fortunei var. vegetus (Rehder) Rehder, J. Arnold Arb. 19: 80. 1938. Euonymus fortunei forma vegetus (Rehder) Rehder, Man. Cult. Trees (ed. 2), 559. 1940. Type from Japan. Euonymus patens Rehder in Sargent, Trees & Shrubs 1(3): 127, pi. 64. 1903. Euonymus kiautschovicus var. patens (Rehder) Loes., PI. Wilson. 1(3): 486. 1913. Euonymus fortunei var. patens (Rehder) Hand.-Mazz,. Symb. Sin, 7(3): 660. 1933. Type from China. Euonymus japonicus var. acutus Rehder, PI. Wilson. 1(3): 485. 1913. Euonymus radicans var. acutus Rehder, Mtt. Deutsch. Dendr. Ges. 22: 257. 1913. Type from China. Euonymus radicans var. kewensis Bean, Trees Shrubs Brit. Isl. 1: 542. 1914. Euonymus fortunei forma kewensis (Bean) Rehder, J. Arnold. Arb. 28: 445. 1947. Euonymus kewensis (Bean) H.A Hesse in Moller's Deutsch. Gartn.-Zeit. 47: 217. 1932. Type from Japan. Euonymus radicans var. coloratus (Rehder) Rehder, Man. Cult. Trees, 552. 1927. Euonymus radicans var. acutus forma coloratus Rehder, J. Arnold Arb. 7: 30. 1926. Euonymus fortunei forma coloratus (Rehder) Rehder, J. Arnold Arb. 19: 77. 1938. Type from China. Euonymus radicans [unranked] minimus Simon-Louis, Cat, 1912-1913: 43. 1912. Euonymus radicans var. minimus (Simon-Louis) Rehder in Bailey, Stand. Cycl. Hort. 2: 1188. 1914. Euonymus fortunei forma minimus (Simon-Louis) Rehder, J. Arnold Arbor. 19: 79. 1938. Type from China. Euonymus fortunei var. villosus (Nakai) H, Hara, Enum. Sperm. Jap. 3: 86. 1954. Euonymus radicans Sieb. ex Miquel var. villosus Nakai in J. Jap. Bot. 17: 679. 1941. Type from Japan. Var. villosus is endemic to Japan (western Honshu and Kyushu) and recognized as a valid entity by Noshiro (1999) and in the Flora of Japan Database (2010). Typical E. fortunei also occurs in Japan. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I'm grateful to David Boufford, Robert George, and the BRIT library for help with literature, LITERATURE CITED Bailey, L.H. 1945. Manual of Cultivated Plants (rev. ed.). MacMillan, New York Bean, W.J. 1973. Trees and Shrubs hardy in the British Isles (ed. 8). Vol. 2. John Murray, London. Biakelock, R.A 1951, Asynopsis of the genus Euonymus L. Kew Bull. 6: 210-290. Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health. 2010. Invasive Plant Atlas of the United States. A collaborative project between the National Park Service, the University of Georgia Center for Invasive Species and Ecosystem Health, and the Invasive Plant Atlas of New England. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Chester, E.W., B.E. Wofford, and R. Krai. 2010. Atlas of Tennessee Vascular Plants. Vascular Plant Database. University of Tennessee Herbarium, UT-Knoxville. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Dirr, M.A 1998. Manual of woody landscape plants: Their identification, ornamental characteristics, culture, propagation and uses (ed. 5). Stipes Publishing, Champaign, IL. Flora of Japan Database Project. 2009. Japanese Society for Plant Systematists. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Freeman, C.C. and R.L. McGregor. 1998. Vascular plants new to Kansas. Sida 18: 593-604. Kaul, R.B., D.M. Sutherland, and S.B. Rolfsmeier. 2006. The Flora of Nebraska. School of Natural Resources, Inst, of Agriculture and Natural Resources, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln. Ma, J., Z. Zhixiang, Q. Liu, H. Peng, and AM. Funston. 2008. Celastraceae. Flora of China 11 (Oxalidaceae through Aceraceae): 439-492. Mller, J.H. 2003. Normative invasive plants of southern forests: A field guide for identification and control. Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS-62. USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Asheville, NC. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Mohlenbrock, R.H. 1986. Guide to the vascular flora of Illinois (rev. ed.). Southern Illinois Univ. Press, Carbondale, IL. Noshiro, S. 1999. In Iwatsuki, K, D.E. Boufford, and H. Ohba (eds.) (19 authors). Flora of Japan. Vol, lie. Angiospermae, Dicotyledoneae, Archichlamydeae(c). Rehder, A. 1938. New species, varieties and combinations from the herbarium and the collections of the Arnold Arboretum. J. Arnold Arb. 19:71-87. Rehder, A 1940. Manual of cultivated trees and slirubs (ed. 2, rev.). Collier Macmillan Ltd., New York. Serviss, B.E. 2009. Non-native Woody Plants of Arkansas. Dept. of Biology, Henderson State Univ., Arkadelphia, AR. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Tennessee Exotic Pest Plant Council. 2009. Invasive Exotic Pest Plants in Tennessee. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Weakley, AS. 2009. Flora of the Carolinas, Virginia, and Georgia and surrounding areas. Univ. of North Carolina Herbarium, Chapel Hill, NC. Accessed 7 Jan 2010 Zouhar, K. 2009. Euonymus fortunei. In: Fire Effects Information System, [Online], LISDA, Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station, Fire Sciences Laboratory (Producer). Accessed 7 Jan 2010 PHOTOS ONLINE 1. Close-up of the creeping form of the plant, arising here from numerous interlacing stems. 2. Buds 3-5 mm long from creeping stems (left); buds 10-11 mm long from aerial stems (right). 3. Aerial roots (left) and internodal adventitious roots (right) of creeping stems. 4 Vll.il nUiiin yl.-.uny up I11111I ,.| .111 Jin |iu 5 and 6. Edge of the population. 7. Locality in Overton Park, showing the extent of the whole euonymus population, which completely covers the inside of the thicket and extends out along the grassy margins. Margination modified 2 Mar 2010; no other changes.