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Morning Glory

Ipomoea tricolor

Photo by LeonardoMB
Published on Project Noah
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-21.5953, -46.8873

Field Notes

Description:

Herbaceous perennial climber. Stems twining, up to 3.5 m long. Leaves large, broadly ovate-heart-shaped, narrowly pointed at the apex. Inflorescences, axillary, few to many-flowered. Corolla funnel-shaped, 6-9 cm in diameter, usually blue with a white centre but many cultivars with other colours are known.

Habitat:

South America, Mesoamerica, North America, Caribbean, Africa & Madagascar. Native to Mexico, Central America and tropical South America; introduced and naturalised elsewhere in the tropics

Notes:

The seeds, vines, flowers, and leaves contain ergoline alkaloids, and have been used for centuries by many Mexican Native American cultures as an entheogen; they were known to the Aztecs as tlitliltzin, the Nahuatl word for "black" with a reverential suffix. In South America, the seeds are also known as "badoh negro".

Species ID Suggestions

Morning Glory

Ipomoea tricolor

White Edge Morning Glory

Ipomoea nil

Comments (4)

Those long thin sepals are characteristic of Ipomoea nil .
It's a morning glory! I've grown them, so I know what it looks like.
Hi Leonardo, Could it be Larger bindweed (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larger_bindweed)? Best, Lin

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