Passiflora caerulea |
Passiflora bryonioides |
|
---|---|---|
blue passion flower, bluecrown passionflower |
cupped passionflower |
|
Stems | angular when young, glabrous. |
terete, uncinate-hairy. |
Leaves | weakly pungent, glabrous; stipules subreniform, 10–20 × 5–10 mm, glandular-serrate; petiole glandular, glands clavate; blade roughly symmetric, 3–10(–16) × 4–11(–14) cm, deeply (3–)5–7(–9)-lobed, middle lobe as long as or longer than lateral lobes, margins entire but often serrate basally on lobes; abaxial fine veins prominently raised, abaxial nectaries scattered along margins. |
not pungent, uncinate-hairy; stipules ovate-lanceolate, falcate, 2–7 × 1–4 mm, margins entire, eglandular; petiole glandular, glands clavate; blade roughly symmetric, 2–7(–10) × 2–7(–11) cm, deeply (3–)5–7(–9)-lobed, middle lobe as long as or longer than lateral lobes, margins serrate; abaxial fine veins prominently raised, abaxial nectaries absent or sometimes present along lateral veins. |
Flowers | floral tube cuplike, 4–5 mm deep; sepals white, 20–35 × 10–15 mm; petals white, 20–40 × 10–15 mm; corona filament whorls 4, outer filaments dark purple basally, white medially, purple apically (rarely entirely white), linear, terete to slightly flattened, 10–20 mm. |
floral tube cuplike, 1–2 mm deep; sepals white, 15–20 × 5–8 mm; petals white, 8–11 × 2–3 mm; corona filament whorls 1, filaments purple basally, yellow-white apically, linear, terete, sometimes clavate, 5–11 mm. |
Berries | yellow-orange to orange, ovoid to ellipsoid, 30–50 × 30–35 mm. |
green to green-white, ovoid-fusiform, 35–45 × 20–25 mm. |
Floral | bracts ovate to ovate-oblong, 15–25 × 10–15 mm, margins entire or weakly serrate, eglandular. |
bracts linear-subulate, 2–7 × 0.5 mm, margins entire, eglandular. |
2n | = 18. |
= 12. |
Passiflora caerulea |
Passiflora bryonioides |
|
Phenology | Flowering Mar–Jun. | Flowering May–Sep. |
Habitat | Disturbed areas, open woodlands, chaparral | Semidesert grasslands, oak savannas |
Elevation | 0–400 m (0–1300 ft) | 1000–1300 m (3300–4300 ft) |
Distribution |
CA; South America (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay) [Introduced in North America]
|
AZ; Mexico |
Discussion | Passiflora caerulea is cultivated widely in the flora area but naturalized only in the Los Angeles metropolitan area (see F. Hrusa et al. 2002). It is possibly introduced in the Mule Mountains of southeastern Arizona (J. Koweek, pers. comm.), although this has not been confirmed. It was reported also from Utah by S. L. Welsh et al. (2003), although as “cultivated...long-persisting,” suggesting that it is not actually naturalized there. This species is cold-hardy and can be cultivated in gardens in relatively cold regions (at least USDA plant hardiness zone 6), but it is unlikely to flower in such areas because of relatively short growing seasons, although it still makes an interesting foliage plant. Even in the absence of sexual reproduction, this species can persist and even spread locally by root suckering. The artificial hybrid Passiflora ×belotii will key to P. caerulea in this treatment. However, the leaves of P. ×belotii are consistently three-lobed, unlike the primarily five- to seven-lobed leaves of P. caerulea. (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
J. M. Coulter (1890, 1891) reported Passiflora bryonioides (as the synonym P. inamoena A. Gray) from Hidalgo, Texas; that specimen may now be lost or it may have been misidentified. The nearest to southernmost Texas this species is confirmed to occur is about 500 km to the southwest (J. M. MacDougal 1994). (Discussion copyrighted by Flora of North America; reprinted with permission.) |
Source | FNA vol. 6, p. 181. | FNA vol. 6, p. 180. |
Parent taxa | Passifloraceae > Passiflora | Passifloraceae > Passiflora |
Sibling taxa | ||
Name authority | Linnaeus: Sp. Pl. 2: 959. (1753) | Kunth: in A. von Humboldt et al., Nov. Gen. Sp. 2(fol.): 111 |
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