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Poison Oak

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Poison oak in full flower outside of Medford, Oregon. While it is an important food source to several species of deer and squirrels, the slightest casual contact with leaves and flowers and the urushiol oil found within the plant can cause mild to severe reactions in humans in the form of blistered skin, swelling of limbs, seeping wounds and severe itching. Symptoms can become worse with proximity to the smoke of burning poison oak.

Copyright
©2018
Image Size
4912x7360 / 27.4MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
Anacardiaceae, Angiosperms, Eudicots, Jackson County, Lower Table Rock, Medford, Oregon, PNW, Pacific Northwest, Pacific poison oak, Plantae, Rhus diversiloba, Rosids, Sapindales, T. diversilobum, Toxicodendron, Toxicodendron diversilobum, allergic, allergy, beautiful, beauty, bloom, blooming, blooms, blossom, blossoms, botany, bud, caution, color, danger, dicot, flora, flower, flowers, fresh, green, harmful, native, natural, nature, perennial, plant, plants, poison, poison oak, reaction, shrub, spring, sumac, vine, western poison oak, white, wild, wildflower, wildflowers, woody
Contained in galleries
Anacardiaceae (Cashew and Sumac Family)
Poison oak in full flower outside of Medford, Oregon. While it is an important food source to several species of deer and squirrels, the slightest casual contact with leaves and flowers and the urushiol oil found within the plant can cause mild to severe reactions in humans in the form of blistered skin, swelling of limbs, seeping wounds and severe itching. Symptoms can become worse with proximity to the smoke of burning poison oak.