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Vitis riparia Michx, with common names riverbank grape or frost grape, [1] is a vine indigenous to North America.As a climbing or trailing vine, it is widely distributed across central and eastern Canada and the central and northeastern parts of the United States, from Quebec to Texas, and eastern Montana to Nova Scotia.
There are at least nine members of the buckthorn and grape order, Rhamnales, ... Vitis riparia, riverbank grape; Further reading. Schiemann, Donald Anthony (2005).
Beta is a winter-hardy variety of North American grape derived from a cross of the Vitis labrusca-based cultivar Concord and a selection of Vitis riparia, the wild riverbank grape, called Carver. [1] It is an extremely cold-hardy grape that is self-fertile.
Vitis riparia (also sometimes known as Vitis vulpina), the "river bank grape", native to northeastern North America. Vitis amurensis, the Asiatic grape species, native to Siberia and China. Vitis rotundifolia, the muscadines, native to the southern half of the United States; Vitis labrusca, native to northeastern North America.
Vitis labrusca — northern fox grape; Vitis riparia — riverbank grape; Vitis vulpina — winter grape; Woodsiaceae. Athyrium americanum — American alpine ladyfern;
Vitis riparia, the riverbank grapevine, sometimes used for winemaking and for jam. Native to the entire Eastern United States and north to Quebec; Vitis rotundifolia (syn. Muscadinia rotundifolia), the muscadine, used for jams and wine.
Opponents of a 2,400-home annexation on the west side of Riverbank have filed signatures aimed at getting it on a ballot. If approved sometime in 2024, the measure would require future voter ...
This list of grape varieties includes cultivated grapes, whether used for wine, or eating as a table grape, fresh or dried (raisin, currant, sultana). For a complete list of all grape species, including those unimportant to agriculture, see Vitis .