Hedera Pastuchovii Woronow, commonly known as the "Russian Ivy", is part of the family of Araliaceae due to the area in which it is found and used.

Hedera Pastuchovii G Woronow has a chromosome number of 2n= 144 (6x), making it a hexaploid. The distribution of the plant varies around the content of Asia, but it is native to the Caucasus, Elburz Mountains of Iran. In a recent study of phylogenetics, H. Pastuchovii, has been found to be related to other species of parsimony through a test of cpDNA restriction site variation analysis. In the clade containing Asian taxa, the results showed that the pre-existing phylogenies are largely congruent to one another, helping to place one additional clade helped resolve the positions of H. maroccana, H. iberica, and H. canariensis in the combined analysis.[1]

Hedera Pastuchovii is a climbing plant that can be found on many trees or walls, as it clings up to any surface and is good for climbing or scaling any walls or trees.

  1. ^ "EVOLUTION OF HEDERA (THE IVY GENUS, ARALIACEAE): INSIGHTS FROM CHLOROPLAST DNA DATA". International Journal of Plant Sciences. Vol. 164, No. 4: pp. 593-602. July 2003 – via JSTOR. {{cite journal}}: |pages= has extra text (help); |volume= has extra text (help); line feed character in |title= at position 49 (help)