The twigs are fuzzy when new, and turn sleek with age. The
leaves are up to long and produce a very strong odour when crushed. The aroma is bitter and often disagreeable (earning the plant the name skunkbush). The leaves are green when new and turn orange and brown in the fall. The flowers, borne on small catkins ("short shoots"), are yellowish-green and pollinated by animals. The plant yields hairy and slightly sticky reddish-orange
berries which have an aroma similar to limes and a very sour taste. The acidity comes from
tannic and
gallic acids. The seeds are dispersed by animals that eat the berries. The shrub also
reproduces vegetatively, sending up sprouts several meters away and forming thickets.
Similar species Rhus trilobata closely resembles other members of the genus that have leaves with three "leaflets" ("trifoliate" leaves). These include
Rhus aromatica, native to eastern North America, and
western poison-oak. The shape of the leaflets and the habit of the shrub make this species, like some other
Rhus, resemble small-leafed oaks (
Quercus).
Toxicodendron diversilobum lacks the foul odour and has white berries. == Distribution and habitat ==