Humidity, light, moisture, and temperature are the reasons why kudzu (Pueraria spp) grows so very well in the southeastern United States of America. Additionally, the east and southeast Asian native vine benefits from being a newcomer plant whose growth is super-fast and whose spread is super-extensive because of propagation by rhizomes, seeds, and stolons.
Please tell me you're not trying to grow kudzu on purpose. If you are located in the United States, there is a ban in most all states from any type of kudzu propagation be it commercially or privately. (from Greenwood Nursery)
Kudzu (Pueraria montana var. lobata) thrives in a variety of habitats, primarily in the southeastern United States. It prefers sunny areas with well-drained soil, often found in disturbed sites like roadsides, fields, and abandoned farmland. The plant can also adapt to shade and is known for its rapid growth, allowing it to overtake and smother native vegetation in forests and other ecosystems. Its ability to grow in diverse environments contributes to its classification as an invasive species.
Walking ferns primarily grow in North America, particularly in the eastern United States and southeastern Canada. They can be found in shaded, moist habitats such as forests, rocky slopes, and along stream banks.
Sawgrass can be found in wetlands and marshy areas in the southeastern United States, particularly in states like Florida, Louisiana, and parts of Georgia and South Carolina. It is commonly associated with the Everglades in Florida.
Kudzu is one of the 4 fastest growing plants on the planet. Including bamboo, kelp and corn, kudzu can grow up to 1 foot (12 inches) a day. Kelp is faster, at 2 feet.
Vines can grow on houses, particularly ivy or kudzu.
Yes, Edelweiss does not naturally grow in the United States as it is native to the Alps in Europe.
it would grow in warm places like maybe the dessert.
Kudzu was considered to be a good bankholder against erosion, a good cover crop between plantings, and a good soil builder. For kudzu is a legume, which are the nitrogen fixers of the plant world. Nitrogen fixing bacteria, nematodes and plants turn nitrogen that's present in the soil, but unavailable to plants, into soluble nitrogen. For nitrogen must be soluble, to be taken up as the water and nutrients that roots need to send up to shoots, for photosynthesis. Plants need 16-17 nutrients for growth and survival. And nitrogen is in the top most needed of those nutrients. For these reasons, the Civilian Conservation Corps planted kudzu along highways in the Southern States. Also during the depression of the 1930s, the Soil Conservation Service paid farmers $8.00 for every acre that was planted with the purported aesthetic, environmentally friendly plant. And key newspapers and key nurseries promoted the plant's use.
Central and Eastern America describes where Virginia creeper grows. The flowering plant in question (Parthenocissus quinquefolia) grows in southeastern Canada west to Manitoba in the southeastern United States west to Utah. It also is native south down through eastern Mexico and Guatemala.
Kudzu plants can grow up to 1 foot per day in ideal conditions due to their rapid growth rate and ability to climb and spread quickly.
Carrots grow in many countries, but they also grow in the United States.