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Vitis riparia
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Vitis riparia Michx, with riverbank grape or frost grape, is a vine indigenous to . As a climbing or trailing , it is widely distributed across central and eastern and the central and northeastern parts of the , from to , and eastern to . There are reports of isolated populations in the northwestern USA, but these are probably naturalized. It is long-lived and capable of reaching into the upper canopy of the tallest . It produces dark fruit that are appealing to both birds and people, and has been used extensively in commercial viticulture as and in breeding programs.

Riverbank grape is a translation of the scientific name Vitis riparia; means "of riverbanks" in , deriving from "riverbank".


Description
Mature have loose, fissured bark, and may attain several inches in diameter. Leaves are alternate, often with opposite or inflorescences, coarsely toothed, long and broad, sometimes with sparse hairs on the underside of .

V. riparia is functionally . The is a long and loose, and the are small, fragrant, and white or greenish in color. V. riparia blooms sometime between April and June and in August or September produces a small blue-black berry () with a bloom, seeded, juicy, edible, vinous in flavor, lacking the "foxy" characteristics of , but usually quite and . V. riparia has a wide range and may deviate considerably in detail from the above general description. White berries, , large clusters, large berries, and sweet fruit are among the known variations. However, some observers consider such variations as evidence of natural hybridization with other species of .


Habitat
Vitis riparia has the largest geographical range of any of the North American species. It is present across nearly the entire eastern half of North America, from southern , to Piedmont, Alabama, and the but absent of the coastal plains and the westerner parts of North America of the . Variants of the species have been observed as far north as Riding Mountain National Park in , and as far west as , , and .

In the wild, the vine thrives along exposed areas with good sun exposure and adequate soil moisture, such as riverbanks, forest clearings, fence lines and along road sides. The species has adapted to a variety of .


Cold hardiness and disease resistance
Some V. riparia vines have been known to withstand temperatures as low as .Rombough, Lon. The Grape Grower Chelsea Green Publishing, 2002. p. 218. The foliage is typically resistant to and black rot, and the roots resistant to . The berries, however, are often sensitive to mildew and black rot if the vine is exposed to prolonged wet and humid conditions.


Uses
Perhaps the most significant agricultural usage of V. riparia is as grafted for . Important advantages of the use of V. riparia (and hybrids between it and other species) include resistance to and adaptation to variant soil types.

Due to the extensive cold hardiness and fungal disease resistance of this species, it has been used extensively in programs to transfer cold hardy and disease resistant to domesticated grapes. The French-American are notable examples of these attempts. V. riparia has been used extensively for over a hundred years to create hardy hybrids. Many V. riparia hybrids are currently being used and investigated by plant breeders and in breeding programs such as those conducted by the University of Minnesota's horticulture program in an effort to make a commercially viable wine grape that can survive the northern climate of the . Examples of commercially important cultivars with significant V. Riparia ancestry include , Marechal Foch, Triomphe d'Alsace and Frontenac.

While V. riparia shares many important characteristics with its cousin, , the small size of the berry (making it prone to predation by birds), the high acidity of its fruit (often up to 5% titratable acidity), the intense pigment of its juice, and the presence of aromas in wine produced from it have made it unusable on its own for commercial viticulture.

These grapes are sometimes used to make flavorful homemade , , and .

(2025). 9781402767159, Sterling.


Gallery
File:Vitis riparia HabitusLeavesFruits BotGardBln0906.JPG| Botanical garden in , Germany. File:Vitis riparia Weinsberg 20071016.jpg| Vitis riparia in Germany File:Vitis riparia, Rouge Park.jpg| Ontario, Canada File:Vitis Riparia.JPG|Vitis riparia leaf File:Riparia gloire de Montpellier feuille Cherves.jpg| Riparia gloire de Montpellier (rootstock)

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