Ipomoea pes-caprae |
Ipomoea indica |
|
|---|---|---|
|
bayhops, beach morning glory, goat's foot, man-of-the-earth |
beach morning glory, blue morningglory, oceanblue morning-glory |
|
| Habit | Perennials. | |
| Stems | usually twining, sometimes trailing. |
|
| Leaf | blades cordate, rounded-ovate, or 3–5(–7)-lobed, 30–140 × 30–140 mm, base cordate to sagittate, surfaces glabrous or ± pilose. |
|
| Peduncles | glabrate or sparsely hairy, hairs antrorse to ± appressed. |
|
| Flowers | sepals lance-ovate, 14–21 mm, herbaceous, apex ± acuminate, surfaces glabrous or abaxial sparsely hairy, hairs appressed; corolla usually blue to purple, rarely white, throat and tube white, funnelform, 50–70 mm. |
|
| 2n | = 30. |
|
Ipomoea pes-caprae |
Ipomoea indica |
|
| Phenology | Flowering year-round. | |
| Habitat | Roadsides, thickets. | |
| Elevation | 0–1600 m. [0–5200 ft.] | |
| Distribution |
tropical regions; original distribution unknown; now world-wide in subtropical and tropical climates
|
AL; CA; FL; GA; LA; MS; NC; PA; SC; TX; Mexico; Central America; South America; West Indies [Introduced in Asia]
|
| Discussion | Subspecies 2 (1 in the flora). Subspecies pes-caprae in known from coastal and island shores around and in the Indian Ocean. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
In the flora area, Ipomoea indica rarely produces seeds and rarely survives winters. It is probably native in southern Florida. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
| Parent taxa | ||
| Sibling taxa | ||
| Subordinate taxa | ||
| Synonyms | Convolvulus pes-caprae | Convolvulus indicus, I. mutabilis, Pharbitis cathartica |
| Name authority | (Linnaeus) R. Brown: Observ. Congo, 58. (1818) | (Burman) Merrill: Interpr. Herb. Amboin., 445. (1917) |
| Source | FNA vol. 14. | FNA vol. 14. |
| Web links | ||