Passiflora: Difference between revisions

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| subdivision = About 550, see [[List of Passiflora species|list]]
| subdivision = About 550, see [[List of Passiflora species|list]]
| synonyms =
| synonyms =
{{collapsible list|bullets = true
*''Anthactinia'' {{small|([[Jean Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]] ex [[Max Joseph Roemer|M.Roem.]])}}
|''Decaloba'' [[M.Roem.]]
*''Asephananthes'' {{small|([[Jean Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]])}}
*''Astrophea'' {{small|([[Jean-Baptiste Lamarck|Lam.]] ex [[Max Joseph Roemer|M.Roem.]])}}
|''Anthactinia'' [[Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]]
|''Asephananthes'' [[Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]] ex [[DC.]]
*''Baldwinia'' {{small|([[Constantine Samuel Rafinesque|Raf.]])}}
|''Astephananthes'' [[Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]]
*''Ceratosepalum'' {{small|([[Oerst.]])}}
*''Cieca'' {{small|([[Medik.]])}}
|''Astrophea'' [[Rchb.]]
|''Baldwinia'' [[Raf.]]
*''Decaloba'' {{small|([[Max Joseph Roemer|M.Roem.]])}}
*''Disemma'' {{small|([[Labill.]])}}
|''Blephistelma'' [[Raf.]]
*''Granadilla'' {{small|([[Mill.]])}}
|''Ceratosepalum'' [[Oerst.]]
*''Hollrungia'' {{small|([[K.Schum.]])}}
|''Cieca'' [[Medik.]]
|''Disemma'' [[Labill.]]
*''Monactineirma'' {{small|([[Jean Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]])}}
|''Distephana'' ([[DC.]]) [[Juss.]] ex [[M.Roem.]]
*''Murucuja'' {{small|([[Medik.]])}}
|''Distephia'' [[Salisb.]] ex [[DC.]]
*''Pentaria'' {{small|([[Max Joseph Roemer|M.Roem.]])}}
*''Poggendorffia'' {{small|([[H.Karst.]])}}
|''Dysosmia'' [[M.Roem.]]
*''Tacsonia'' {{small|([[Juss.]])}}
|''Erndelia'' [[Neck.]]
|''Granadilla'' [[Mill.]]
*''Tetrapathaea'' {{small|([[Augustin Pyramus de Candolle|DC.]]) ([[Ludwig Reichenbach|Rchb.]])}}
*''Tetrastylis'' {{small|([[Barb.Rodr.]])}}
|''Hollrungia'' [[K.Schum.]]
|''Lortetia'' [[Ser.]]
| type_species = ''[[Passiflora incarnata]]''
|''Macrophora'' [[Raf.]]
|''Meioperis'' [[Raf.]]
|''Monactineirma'' [[Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent|Bory]]
|''Murucuia'' [[Mill.]]
|''Odostelma'' [[Raf.]]
|''Pentaria'' [[M.Roem.]]
|''Peremis'' [[Raf.]]
|''Pericodia'' [[Raf.]]
|''Poggendorffia'' [[H.Karst.]]
|''Psilanthus'' ([[DC.]]) [[Juss.]] ex [[M.Roem.]]
|''Rathea'' [[H.Karst.]]
|''Senapea'' [[Aubl.]]
|''Synactila'' [[Raf.]]
|''Tacsonia'' [[Juss.]]
|''Tetrapathaea'' [[Rchb.]]
|''Tetrastylis'' [[Barb.Rodr.]]
|''Tripsilina'' [[Raf.]]
|''Xerogona'' [[Raf.]]
}}
| synonyms_ref = <ref name = "POWO">{{cite POWO |id=328300-2 |title=''Passiflora'' L. |accessdate=18 April 2024}}</ref>
| type_species = ''[[Passiflora incarnata]]'' L.<ref name = "IPNI">''Passiflora'' | International Plant Names Index. (n.d.). Retrieved January 8, 2024, from https://www.ipni.org/n/328300-2</ref>
}}
}}


'''''Passiflora''''', known also as the '''passion flowers''' or '''passion vines''', is a [[genus]] of about 550 [[species]] of [[flowering plant]]s, the [[type genus]] of the [[family (biology)|family]] [[Passifloraceae]].
'''''Passiflora''''', known also as the '''passion flowers''' or '''passion vines''', is a [[genus]] of about 550 [[species]] of [[flowering plant]]s, the [[type genus]] of the [[family (biology)|family]] [[Passifloraceae]].


==Description==
They are mostly [[tendril|tendril-bearing]] [[vine]]s, with some being [[shrub]]s or [[tree]]s. They can be [[wood]]y or [[herbaceous]]. Passion flowers produce regular and usually showy [[flower]]s with a distinctive [[Perianth#Corona|corona]]. There can be as many as eight coronal series, as in the case of P. xiikzodl.<rer>{{cite book | last1= Ulmer | first1= Torsten | last2= McDougal | first2= John M. | date= 2004 | title= Passiflora - Passion Flowers of the World | location= Portland | publisher= Timber Press | pages= 158-159}}</ref> The flower is [[merosity|pentamerous]] and ripens into an [[berry (botany)|indehiscent fruit]] with numerous seeds.
===Vegetative characteristics===

They are mostly [[tendril|tendril-bearing]] [[vine]]s, with some being [[shrub]]s or [[tree]]s. They can be [[wood]]y or [[herbaceous]].<ref name = "Ulmer & McDougal, 2004" />
==List of species==
===Generative characteristics===
{{main|List of Passiflora species}}
Passion flowers produce regular and usually showy [[flower]]s with a distinctive [[Perianth#Corona|corona]]. There can be as many as eight coronal series, as in the case of ''P. xiikzodz''.<ref name = "Ulmer & McDougal, 2004">{{cite book | last1= Ulmer | first1= Torsten | last2= McDougal | first2= John M. | date= 2004 | title= Passiflora - Passion Flowers of the World | location= Portland | publisher= Timber Press | pages= 158–159}}</ref> The flower is [[merosity|pentamerous]] and ripens into an [[berry (botany)|indehiscent fruit]] with numerous seeds.


==Distribution==
==Distribution==
''Passiflora'' has a largely [[neotropic]] distribution, unlike other genera in the family [[Passifloraceae]], which includes more [[Paleotropical Kingdom|Old World]] species (such as the genus ''[[Adenia]]''). The vast majority of ''Passiflora'' are found in [[Mexico]], [[Central America]], the [[United States]] and [[South America]], although there are additional representatives in [[Southeast Asia]] and [[Oceania]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Krosnick|first1=S.E.|last2=Porter-Utley|first2=K.E.|last3=MacDougal|first3=J.M.|last4=Jørgensen|first4=P.M.|last5=McDade|first5=L.A.|date=2013|title=New insights into the evolution of Passiflora subgenus Decaloba (Passifloraceae): phylogenetic relationships and morphological synapomorphies|journal=Systematic Botany|volume=38|issue=3|pages=692–713|doi=10.1600/036364413x670359|s2cid=85840835}}</ref> New species continue to be identified: for example, ''[[Passiflora xishuangbannaensis|P. xishuangbannaensis]]'' and ''[[Passiflora pardifolia|P. pardifolia]]'' have only been known to the scientific community since 2005 and 2006, respectively.
''Passiflora'' has a largely [[neotropic]] distribution, unlike other genera in the family [[Passifloraceae]], which includes more [[Paleotropical Kingdom|Old World]] species (such as the genus ''[[Adenia]]''). The vast majority of ''Passiflora'' are found in [[Mexico]], [[Central America]], the [[United States]] and [[South America]], although there are additional representatives in [[Southeast Asia]] and [[Oceania]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Krosnick|first1=S.E.|last2=Porter-Utley|first2=K.E.|last3=MacDougal|first3=J.M.|last4=Jørgensen|first4=P.M.|last5=McDade|first5=L.A.|date=2013|title=New insights into the evolution of Passiflora subgenus Decaloba (Passifloraceae): phylogenetic relationships and morphological synapomorphies|journal=Systematic Botany|volume=38|issue=3|pages=692–713|doi=10.1600/036364413x670359|s2cid=85840835}}</ref> New species continue to be identified: for example, ''[[Passiflora xishuangbannaensis|P. xishuangbannaensis]]'' and ''[[Passiflora pardifolia|P. pardifolia]]'' have only been known to the scientific community since 2005 and 2006, respectively.


Some species of ''Passiflora'' have been naturalized beyond their native ranges. For example, the [[blue passion flower]] (''P. caerulea'') now grows wild in Spain.<ref name = danaetal2001>Dana ''et al.'' [2001]</ref> The [[Passiflora edulis|purple passionfruit]] (''P. edulis'') and its yellow relative ''flavicarpa'' have been introduced in many tropical regions as commercial crops.
Some species of ''Passiflora'' have been naturalized beyond their native ranges. For example, the [[blue passion flower]] (''P. caerulea'') now grows wild in Spain.<ref name=danaetal2001>{{cite journal |last1=Sanz-Elorza |first1=M. |last2=Dana |first2=E. |last3=Sobrino |first3=E. |title=Listado de plantas alóctonas invasoras reales y potenciales en España |journal=Lazaroa |date=2001 |volume=22 |url=https://portalciencia.ull.es/documentos/5ea21bd72999521f7d5204cc |access-date=10 October 2023}}</ref> The [[Passiflora edulis|purple passionfruit]] (''P. edulis'') and its yellow relative ''flavicarpa'' have been introduced in many tropical regions as commercial crops.


==Ecology==
==Ecology==
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The leaves are used for feeding by the [[larva]]e of a number of species of [[Lepidoptera]]. Famously, they are exclusively targeted by many butterfly species of the tribe [[Heliconiini]]. The many defensive adaptations visible on ''Passiflora'' include diverse leaf shapes (which help disguise their identity), colored nubs (which mimic butterfly eggs and can deter Heliconians from ovipositing on a seemingly crowded leaf), [[Nectar#Extrafloral nectaries|extrafloral nectaries]], [[trichome]]s, [[Variegation#Defensive masquerade|variegation]], and chemical defenses.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=de Castro|first1=É.C.P.|last2=Zagrobelny|first2=M.|last3=Cardoso|first3=M.Z.|last4=Bak|first4=S.|date=2017|title=The arms race between heliconiine butterflies and Passiflora plants - new insights on an ancient subject|journal=Biological Reviews|volume=93|issue=1|pages=555–573|doi=10.1111/brv.12357|pmid=28901723|s2cid=23953807}}</ref> These, combined with adaptations on the part of the butterflies, were important in the foundation of [[coevolution|coevolutionary theory]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Ehrlich|first1=P.R.|last2=Raven|first2=P.H.|date=1964|title=Butterflies and Plants: A Study in Coevolution|journal=Evolution|volume=18|issue=4|pages=586–608|doi=10.2307/2406212|jstor=2406212}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Benson|first1=W.W|last2=Brown|first2=K.S.|last3=Gilbert|first3=L.E.|date=1975|title=Coevolution of plants and herbivores: passion flower butterflies|journal=Evolution|volume=29|issue=4|pages=659–680|doi=10.2307/2407076|pmid=28563089|jstor=2407076}}</ref>
The leaves are used for feeding by the [[larva]]e of a number of species of [[Lepidoptera]]. Famously, they are exclusively targeted by many butterfly species of the tribe [[Heliconiini]]. The many defensive adaptations visible on ''Passiflora'' include diverse leaf shapes (which help disguise their identity), colored nubs (which mimic butterfly eggs and can deter Heliconians from ovipositing on a seemingly crowded leaf), [[Nectar#Extrafloral nectaries|extrafloral nectaries]], [[trichome]]s, [[Variegation#Defensive masquerade|variegation]], and chemical defenses.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=de Castro|first1=É.C.P.|last2=Zagrobelny|first2=M.|last3=Cardoso|first3=M.Z.|last4=Bak|first4=S.|date=2017|title=The arms race between heliconiine butterflies and Passiflora plants - new insights on an ancient subject|journal=Biological Reviews|volume=93|issue=1|pages=555–573|doi=10.1111/brv.12357|pmid=28901723|s2cid=23953807}}</ref> These, combined with adaptations on the part of the butterflies, were important in the foundation of [[coevolution|coevolutionary theory]].<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Ehrlich|first1=P.R.|last2=Raven|first2=P.H.|date=1964|title=Butterflies and Plants: A Study in Coevolution|journal=Evolution|volume=18|issue=4|pages=586–608|doi=10.2307/2406212|jstor=2406212}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Benson|first1=W.W|last2=Brown|first2=K.S.|last3=Gilbert|first3=L.E.|date=1975|title=Coevolution of plants and herbivores: passion flower butterflies|journal=Evolution|volume=29|issue=4|pages=659–680|doi=10.2307/2407076|pmid=28563089|jstor=2407076}}</ref>

Recent studies have shown that passiflora both grow faster and protect themselves better in high-nitrogen soils. In low-nitrogen environments, passiflora focus on growth rather than defense and are more vulnerable to herbivores.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Morrison |first=Colin R. |last2=Hart |first2=Lauren |last3=Wolf |first3=Amelia A. |last4=Sedio |first4=Brian E. |last5=Armstrong |first5=Wyatt |last6=Gilbert |first6=Lawrence E. |date=2024-03-03 |title=Growth‐chemical defence‐metabolomic expression trade‐off is relaxed as soil nutrient availability increases for a tropical passion vine |url=https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2435.14537 |journal=Functional Ecology |language=en |doi=10.1111/1365-2435.14537 |issn=0269-8463}}</ref>


The following lepidoptera larvae are known to feed on ''Passiflora'':
The following lepidoptera larvae are known to feed on ''Passiflora'':
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The [[bract]]s of the [[stinking passion flower]] are covered by hairs which exude a sticky fluid. Many small insects get stuck to this and get digested to [[nutrient]]-rich goo by [[protease]]s and [[acid phosphatase]]s. Since the insects usually killed are rarely major [[Pest (organism)|pests]], this passion flower seems to be a [[protocarnivorous plant]].<ref>Radhamani ''et al.'' (1995)</ref>
The [[bract]]s of the [[stinking passion flower]] are covered by hairs which exude a sticky fluid. Many small insects get stuck to this and get digested to [[nutrient]]-rich goo by [[protease]]s and [[acid phosphatase]]s. Since the insects usually killed are rarely major [[Pest (organism)|pests]], this passion flower seems to be a [[protocarnivorous plant]].<ref>Radhamani ''et al.'' (1995)</ref>


[[Banana passion flower]] or "banana poka" (''P. tarminiana''), originally from Central [[Brazil]], is an [[invasive species|invasive]] [[weed]], especially on the islands of [[Hawaii]]. It is commonly spread by [[feral]] [[pig]]s eating the fruits. It overgrows and smothers stands of [[endemic (ecology)|endemic]] vegetation, mainly on roadsides. [[Blue passion flower]] (''P. caerulea'') is holding its own in Spain these days, and it probably needs to be watched so that unwanted spreading can be curtailed.<ref name = danaetal2001 />
[[Banana passion flower]] or "banana poka" (''P. tarminiana''), originally from Central [[Brazil]], is an [[invasive species|invasive]] [[weed]], especially on the islands of [[Hawaii]]. It is commonly spread by [[feral]] [[pig]]s eating the fruits. It overgrows and smothers stands of [[endemic (ecology)|endemic]] vegetation, mainly on roadsides. [[Blue passion flower]] (''P. caerulea'') is an invasive species in Spain and considered likely to threaten ecosystems there.<ref name = danaetal2001 />


On the other hand, some species are [[endangered]] due to unsustainable [[logging]] and other forms of [[habitat destruction]]. For example, the [[Chilean passion flower]] (''[[Passiflora pinnatistipula|P. pinnatistipula]]'') is a rare vine growing in the Tropical [[Andes]] southwards from [[Venezuela]] between {{convert|2,500 and 3,800|m}} altitude, and in Coastal Central Chile, where it only occurs in a few tens of square kilometres of fog forest by the sea, near Zapallar. ''P. pinnatistipula'' has a round fruit, unusual in ''Tacsonia'' group species like banana passion flower and ''[[Passiflora mixta|P. mixta]]'', with their elongated tubes and brightly red to rose-colored petals.
On the other hand, some species are [[endangered]] due to unsustainable [[logging]] and other forms of [[habitat destruction]]. For example, the Chilean passion flower (''[[Passiflora pinnatistipula|P. pinnatistipula]]'') is a rare vine growing in the Tropical [[Andes]] southwards from [[Venezuela]] between {{convert|2,500 and 3,800|m}} altitude, and in Coastal Central Chile, where it only occurs in a few tens of square kilometres of fog forest by the sea, near Zapallar. ''P. pinnatistipula'' has a round fruit, unusual in ''Tacsonia'' group species like banana passion flower and ''[[Passiflora mixta|P. mixta]]'', with their elongated tubes and brightly red to rose-colored petals.


Notable and sometimes economically significant [[pathogen]]s of ''Passiflora'' are several [[sac fungi]] of the genus ''[[Septoria]]'' (including ''[[Septoria passiflorae|S. passiflorae]]''), the undescribed [[proteobacterium]] called "[[Pseudomonas tomato]]" ([[Pathovar|pv.]] ''passiflorae''), the ''[[Potyvirus]]'' ''[[passionfruit woodiness virus]]'', and the ''[[Carlavirus]]'' ''[[Passiflora latent virus]]''.
Notable and sometimes economically significant [[pathogen]]s of ''Passiflora'' are several [[sac fungi]] of the genus ''[[Septoria]]'' (including ''[[Septoria passiflorae|S. passiflorae]]''), the undescribed [[proteobacterium]] called "[[Pseudomonas tomato]]" ([[Pathovar|pv.]] ''passiflorae''), the ''[[Potyvirus]]'' ''[[passionfruit woodiness virus]]'', and the ''[[Carlavirus]]'' ''[[Passiflora latent virus]]''.
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===Ornamental===
===Ornamental===
[[File:Flickr - ggallice - Passiflora, Gainesville.jpg|thumb|''[[Passiflora incarnata]]'', one of the most common passion flowers]]
[[File:Flickr - ggallice - Passiflora, Gainesville.jpg|thumb|''[[Passiflora incarnata]]'', one of the most common passion flowers]]
[[File:Joseph Martin Kronheim - The Sunday at Home 1880 - Revelation 22-17.jpg|thumb|Passiflora entwine this 1880 [[Baxter process]] illustration by [[Joseph Martin Kronheim]]]]
[[File:Joseph Martin Kronheim - The Sunday at Home 1880 - Revelation 22-17.jpg|thumb|''Passiflora'' entwine this 1880 [[Baxter process]] illustration by [[Joseph Martin Kronheim]]]]


A number of species of ''Passiflora'' are cultivated outside their natural range for both their flowers and fruit. Hundreds of hybrids have been named; hybridizing is currently being done extensively for flowers, foliage and fruit. The following hybrids and cultivars have gained the [[Royal Horticultural Society]]'s [[Award of Garden Merit]]:
A number of species of ''Passiflora'' are cultivated outside their natural range for both their flowers and fruit. Hundreds of hybrids have been named; hybridizing is currently being done extensively for flowers, foliage and fruit. The following hybrids and cultivars have gained the [[Royal Horticultural Society]]'s [[Award of Garden Merit]]:
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* [[Sweet granadilla]] (''P. ligularis'') is another widely grown species. In large parts of [[Africa]] and [[Australia]] it is the plant called "passionfruit": confusingly, in [[South Africa]]n English the latter species is more often called ''granadilla'' (without an adjective). Its fruit is somewhat intermediate between the two sold as ''P. edulis''.
* [[Sweet granadilla]] (''P. ligularis'') is another widely grown species. In large parts of [[Africa]] and [[Australia]] it is the plant called "passionfruit": confusingly, in [[South Africa]]n English the latter species is more often called ''granadilla'' (without an adjective). Its fruit is somewhat intermediate between the two sold as ''P. edulis''.
* [[Maypop]] (''P. incarnata''), a common species in the southeastern US. This is a subtropical representative of this mostly tropical family. However, unlike the more tropical cousins, this particular species is hardy enough to withstand the cold down to {{convert|-20|C|F}} before its roots die (it is native as far north as [[Pennsylvania]] and has been cultivated as far north as [[Boston]] and [[Chicago]].) The fruit is sweet, yellowish, and roughly the size of a chicken's egg; it enjoys some popularity as a native plant with edible fruit and few [[pest (organism)|pests]].
* [[Maypop]] (''P. incarnata''), a common species in the southeastern US. This is a subtropical representative of this mostly tropical family. However, unlike the more tropical cousins, this particular species is hardy enough to withstand the cold down to {{convert|-20|C|F}} before its roots die (it is native as far north as [[Pennsylvania]] and has been cultivated as far north as [[Boston]] and [[Chicago]].) The fruit is sweet, yellowish, and roughly the size of a chicken's egg; it enjoys some popularity as a native plant with edible fruit and few [[pest (organism)|pests]].
* [[Giant granadilla]] (giant tumbo or ''badea'', ''P. quadrangularis''), [[water lemon]] (''P. laurifolia'') and [[sweet calabash]] (''P. maliformis'') are ''Passiflora'' species locally famed for their fruit, but not widely known elsewhere {{as of|2008|lc=on}}.{{cn|date=October 2022<!-- this was added without support in 2008-->}}
* [[Giant granadilla]] (giant tumbo or ''badea'', ''P. quadrangularis''), [[water lemon]] (''P. laurifolia'') and [[sweet calabash]] (''P. maliformis'') are ''Passiflora'' species locally famed for their fruit,<ref>{{Cite EB1911|wstitle=Granadilla|volume=12|page=336}}</ref> but not widely known elsewhere {{as of|2008|lc=on}}.{{cn|date=October 2022<!-- this was added without support in 2008-->}}
* The [[Passiflora caerulea|blue passionflower]] (''Passiflora caerulea'') produces bright orange fruit with numerous seeds. While the fruit is edible, it is often described as being bland in comparison to other edible passionfruit, or with a flavour vaguely similar to [[Blackberry|blackberries]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Passiflora caerulea (Blue Passion Flower) |url=https://www.gardenia.net/plant/passiflora-caerulea-blue-passion-flower |access-date=2022-08-21 |website=Gardenia.net |language=en}}</ref>
* The [[Passiflora caerulea|blue passionflower]] (''Passiflora caerulea'') produces bright orange fruit with numerous seeds. While the fruit is edible, it is often described as being bland in comparison to other edible passionfruit, or with a flavour vaguely similar to [[Blackberry|blackberries]].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Passiflora caerulea (Blue Passion Flower) |url=https://www.gardenia.net/plant/passiflora-caerulea-blue-passion-flower |access-date=2022-08-21 |website=Gardenia.net |language=en}}</ref>
* [[Wild maracuja]] are the fruit of ''P. foetida'', which are popular in [[Southeast Asia]].
* [[Wild maracuja]] are the fruit of ''P. foetida'', which are popular in [[Southeast Asia]].
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==Etymology and names==
==Etymology and names==
The ''passion'' in ''passion flower'' refers to [[Passion (Christianity)|the passion of Jesus]] in [[Christianity|Christian theology]];<ref name= "Kostka ">{{cite web | last = Kostka | first = Arun Oswin |url = http://saintscatholic.blogspot.com/p/saint-symbols.html | title = Flowers in Christian Symbolism}}</ref> the word ''passion'' comes from the [[Latin]] {{lang|la|[[wikt:passio#Latin|passio]]}}, meaning 'suffering'. In the 15th and 16th centuries, Spanish Christian missionaries adopted the unique physical structures of this plant, particularly the numbers of its various flower parts, as symbols of the last days of [[Jesus]] and especially his [[crucifixion]]:<ref name="Hammer2015">{{cite book|author=Roger L. Hammer|title=Everglades Wildflowers: A Field Guide to Wildflowers of the Historic Everglades, including Big Cypress, Corkscrew, and Fakahatchee Swamps|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-S0aBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA206|date=6 January 2015|publisher=Falcon Guides|isbn=978-1-4930-1459-0|pages=206–}}</ref>
[[File:Passiflora caerulea (makro close-up).jpg|thumb|right|[[Blue passion flower]] (''P. caerulea'') showing most elements of the Christian symbolism]]
[[File:Passiflora caerulea (makro close-up).jpg|thumb|right|[[Blue passion flower]] (''P. caerulea'') showing most elements of the Christian symbolism]]
[[File:Passiflora Krishnakamal Karnataka India.jpg|thumb|right|''Passiflora'' 'Soi Fah', {{aka}} {{transliteration|mr|Krishnakamala}} in India]]

The ''passion'' in ''passion flower'' refers to [[Passion (Christianity)|the passion of Jesus]] in [[Christianity|Christian theology]];<ref name= "Kostka ">{{cite web | last = Kostka | first = Arun Oswin |url = http://saintscatholic.blogspot.com/p/saint-symbols.html | title = Flowers in Christian Symbolism}}</ref> the word ''passion'' comes from the [[Latin]] {{lang|la|[[wikt:passio#Latin|passio]]}}, meaning 'suffering'. In the 15th and 16th centuries, Spanish Christian missionaries adopted the unique physical structures of this plant, particularly the numbers of its various flower parts, as symbols of the last days of [[Jesus]] and especially his [[crucifixion]]:<ref name="Hammer2015">{{cite book|author=Roger L. Hammer|title=Everglades Wildflowers: A Field Guide to Wildflowers of the Historic Everglades, including Big Cypress, Corkscrew, and Fakahatchee Swamps|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-S0aBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA206|date=6 January 2015|publisher=Falcon Guides|isbn=978-1-4930-1459-0|pages=206–}}</ref>

* The pointed tips of the leaves were taken to represent the [[Holy Lance]].
* The pointed tips of the leaves were taken to represent the [[Holy Lance]].
* The [[tendril]]s represent the [[whip]]s used in the [[flagellation of Christ]].
* The [[tendril]]s represent the [[whip]]s used in the [[flagellation of Christ]].
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| q=lilikoi
| q=lilikoi
| access-date=2014-11-02
| access-date=2014-11-02
}}</ref> {{lang|haw|lī}} is a string used for tying fabric together, such as a [[shoelace]], and {{lang|haw|liko}} means 'to spring forth leaves'.<ref>Pukui ''et al.'' (1992)</ref>
}}</ref> {{lang|haw|lī}} is a string used for tying fabric together, such as a [[shoelace]], and {{lang|haw|liko}} means 'to spring forth leave'.<ref>Pukui ''et al.'' (1992)</ref>


In [[India]], it is known as [[Krishnakamala]] because of its dark violet blue colour which resembles Bhagwan [[Krishna]].
In [[India]], blue passionflowers are called {{transliteration|mr|Krishnakamala}} ({{lang-mr|कृष्णकमळ}}) in Karnataka and Maharashtra, while in Uttar Pradesh and generally north it is colloquially called {{transliteration|hi|Panch Pandav}} (referring to the five [[Pandavas]] in the Hindu epic, the {{transliteration|hi|[[Mahabharata]]}}). The five anthers are interpreted as the five Pandavas, the divine [[Krishna]] is at the centre, and the radial filaments are opposing hundred. The colour blue is moreover associated with Krishna as the colour of his aura. [[File:Passiflora Krishnakamal Karnataka India.jpg|thumb|right|''Passiflora'' 'Soi Fah', {{aka}} {{transliteration|mr|Krishnakamala}} in India]]

In northern [[Peru]] and Bolivia, the [[banana passionfruit]]s are known as {{lang|es|tumbos}}. This is one possible source of the name of the [[Tumbes region]] of Peru.

In [[Turkey]], the shape of the flowers have reminded people of [[Rota Fortunae]], thus it is called {{lang|tr|çarkıfelek}}.

In [[South Africa]] the passionfruit is known as a ''granadilla''.


==Taxonomy==
==Taxonomy==
Line 195: Line 216:
Some studies have shown that the segregate Old World genera ''[[Hollrungia]]'' and ''[[Tetrapathaea]]'' are nested within ''Passiflora'', and form a fifth subgenus (''Tetrapathaea'').<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Krosnick|first1=S.E.|last2=Ford|first2=A.J.|last3=Freudenstein|first3=J.V.|date=2009|title=Taxonomic Revision of Passiflora Subgenus Tetrapathea Including the Monotypic Genera Hollrungia and Tetrapathea (Passifloraceae), and a New Species of Passiflora|journal=Systematic Botany|volume=34|issue=2|pages=375–385|doi=10.1600/036364409788606343|s2cid=86038282}}</ref> Other studies support the current four subgenus classification.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Hansen|first1=K.A.|last2=Gilbert|first2=L.E.|last3=Simpson|first3=B.B.|last4=Downie|first4=S.R.|last5=Cervi|first5=A.C.|last6=Jansen|first6=R.K.|date=2006|title=Phylogenetic Relationships and Chromosome Number Evolution in Passiflora|journal=Systematic Botany|volume=31|issue=1|pages=138–150|doi=10.1600/036364406775971769|s2cid=4820527}}</ref>
Some studies have shown that the segregate Old World genera ''[[Hollrungia]]'' and ''[[Tetrapathaea]]'' are nested within ''Passiflora'', and form a fifth subgenus (''Tetrapathaea'').<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Krosnick|first1=S.E.|last2=Ford|first2=A.J.|last3=Freudenstein|first3=J.V.|date=2009|title=Taxonomic Revision of Passiflora Subgenus Tetrapathea Including the Monotypic Genera Hollrungia and Tetrapathea (Passifloraceae), and a New Species of Passiflora|journal=Systematic Botany|volume=34|issue=2|pages=375–385|doi=10.1600/036364409788606343|s2cid=86038282}}</ref> Other studies support the current four subgenus classification.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Hansen|first1=K.A.|last2=Gilbert|first2=L.E.|last3=Simpson|first3=B.B.|last4=Downie|first4=S.R.|last5=Cervi|first5=A.C.|last6=Jansen|first6=R.K.|date=2006|title=Phylogenetic Relationships and Chromosome Number Evolution in Passiflora|journal=Systematic Botany|volume=31|issue=1|pages=138–150|doi=10.1600/036364406775971769|s2cid=4820527}}</ref>


Relationships below the subgenus level are not known with certainty and are an active area of research. The Old World species form two clades – supersection ''Disemma'' (part of subgenus ''Decaloba'') and subgenus ''Tetrapathaea''. The former is composed of 21 species divided into sections ''Disemma'' (three Australian species), ''Holrungiella'' (one New Guinean species) and ''Octandranthus'' (seventeen south and east Asian species).<ref>Shawn Elizabeth Krosnick, PhD thesis, [http://drc.ohiolink.edu/handle/2374.OX/6144 Phylogenetic relationships and patterns of morphological evolution in the Old Word species of ''Passiflora'' (subgenus ''Decaloba'': supersection ''Disemma'' and subgenus ''Tetrapathaea'')]</ref>
Relationships below the subgenus level are not known with certainty and are an active area of research. The Old World species form two clades – supersection ''Disemma'' (part of subgenus ''Decaloba'') and subgenus ''Tetrapathaea''. The former is composed of 21 species divided into sections ''Disemma'' (three Australian species), ''Holrungiella'' (one New Guinean species) and ''Octandranthus'' (seventeen south and east Asian species).<ref>Shawn Elizabeth Krosnick, PhD thesis, [http://drc.ohiolink.edu/handle/2374.OX/6144 Phylogenetic relationships and patterns of morphological evolution in the Old Word species of ''Passiflora'' (subgenus ''Decaloba'': supersection ''Disemma'' and subgenus ''Tetrapathaea'')] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720024640/http://drc.ohiolink.edu/handle/2374.OX/6144 |date=20 July 2011 }}</ref>


The remaining (New World) species of subgenus ''Decaloba'' are divided into seven supersections. Supersection ''Pterosperma'' includes four species from Central America and southern Mexico. Supersection ''Hahniopathanthus'' includes five species from Central America, Mexico and northernmost South America. Supersection ''Cicea'' includes nineteen species, with apetalous flowers. Supersection ''Bryonioides'' includes twenty-one species, with a distribution centered on Mexico. Supersection ''Auriculata'' includes eight species from South America, one of which is also found in Central America. Supersection ''Multiflora'' includes nineteen species. Supersection ''Decaloba'' includes 123 species.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mobot.org/mobot/research/passiflora/|title=MBG: Research: Passiflora Research Network|work=mobot.org}}</ref>
The remaining (New World) species of subgenus ''Decaloba'' are divided into seven supersections. Supersection ''Pterosperma'' includes four species from Central America and southern Mexico. Supersection ''Hahniopathanthus'' includes five species from Central America, Mexico and northernmost South America. Supersection ''Cicea'' includes nineteen species, with apetalous flowers. Supersection ''Bryonioides'' includes twenty-one species, with a distribution centered on Mexico. Supersection ''Auriculata'' includes eight species from South America, one of which is also found in Central America. Supersection ''Multiflora'' includes nineteen species. Supersection ''Decaloba'' includes 123 species.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mobot.org/mobot/research/passiflora/|title=MBG: Research: Passiflora Research Network|work=mobot.org}}</ref>

== Gallery ==
<gallery>
File:Passifloraincense.jpg|''Passiflora'' 'Incense', a hybrid of the Brazilian species ''[[Passiflora cincinnata|P. cincinnata]]'' and the American species ''[[Passiflora incarnata|P. incarnata]]''.
File:Passifloraclearsky.jpg|''[[Passiflora caerulea]]'' 'Clear Sky', a [[tetraploid]] selection of ''P. caerulea''.
</gallery>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 212: Line 239:
* [https://archive.org/search.php?query=Fieldiana%20Killip Killip, The American Species of Passifloraceae, Fieldiana, Bot. 19 (1938)]
* [https://archive.org/search.php?query=Fieldiana%20Killip Killip, The American Species of Passifloraceae, Fieldiana, Bot. 19 (1938)]
* [http://www.passionflow.co.uk/ Passiflora online]
* [http://www.passionflow.co.uk/ Passiflora online]
* [http://www.crfg.org/pubs/ff/passionfruit.html Passiflora edulis]
* [http://www.crfg.org/pubs/ff/passionfruit.html Passiflora edulis] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200705210155/http://www.crfg.org/pubs/ff/passionfruit.html |date=5 July 2020 }}
* [http://www.floridanaturepictures.com/flowers/flowers.html Passiflora Picture Gallery]
* [http://www.floridanaturepictures.com/flowers/flowers.html Passiflora Picture Gallery]
* [http://www.chilebosque.cl/epiv/ppinn.html Chilean Passiflora pictures]
* [http://www.chilebosque.cl/epiv/ppinn.html Chilean Passiflora pictures]
Line 225: Line 252:
[[Category:Butterfly food plants]]
[[Category:Butterfly food plants]]
[[Category:Flora of Central America]]
[[Category:Flora of Central America]]
[[Category:Flora of South America]]
[[Category:Flora of Southern America]]
[[Category:Garden plants of North America]]
[[Category:Garden plants of North America]]
[[Category:Garden plants of Central America]]
[[Category:Garden plants of Central America]]

Latest revision as of 13:27, 18 April 2024

Passiflora
Passiflora incarnata
P. quadrangularis unripe fruit
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Passifloraceae
Subfamily: Passifloroideae
Tribe: Passifloreae
Genus: Passiflora
L.
Type species
Passiflora incarnata L.[1]
Species

About 550, see list

Synonyms[2]
List

Passiflora, known also as the passion flowers or passion vines, is a genus of about 550 species of flowering plants, the type genus of the family Passifloraceae.

Description[edit]

Vegetative characteristics[edit]

They are mostly tendril-bearing vines, with some being shrubs or trees. They can be woody or herbaceous.[3]

Generative characteristics[edit]

Passion flowers produce regular and usually showy flowers with a distinctive corona. There can be as many as eight coronal series, as in the case of P. xiikzodz.[3] The flower is pentamerous and ripens into an indehiscent fruit with numerous seeds.

Distribution[edit]

Passiflora has a largely neotropic distribution, unlike other genera in the family Passifloraceae, which includes more Old World species (such as the genus Adenia). The vast majority of Passiflora are found in Mexico, Central America, the United States and South America, although there are additional representatives in Southeast Asia and Oceania.[4] New species continue to be identified: for example, P. xishuangbannaensis and P. pardifolia have only been known to the scientific community since 2005 and 2006, respectively.

Some species of Passiflora have been naturalized beyond their native ranges. For example, the blue passion flower (P. caerulea) now grows wild in Spain.[5] The purple passionfruit (P. edulis) and its yellow relative flavicarpa have been introduced in many tropical regions as commercial crops.

Ecology[edit]

Stinking passion flower or Wild water lemon (P. foetida) bracts with insect-catching hairs.
The sword-billed hummingbird (Ensifera ensifera) is adapted to feed on Passiflora mixta and similar flowers.
An introduced Passiflora in the Canary Islands.
Passiflora foetida in Tumkur, India
Red colored passion flower in Mysore, India

Passion flowers have floral structures adapted for biotic pollination. Pollinators of Passiflora include bumblebees, carpenter bees (e.g., Xylocopa sonorina), wasps, bats, and hummingbirds (especially hermits such as Phaethornis); some others are additionally capable of self-pollination. Passiflora often exhibit high levels of pollinator specificity, which has led to frequent coevolution across the genus. The sword-billed hummingbird (Ensifera ensifera) is a notable example: it, with its immensely elongated bill, is the sole pollinator of 37 species of high Andean Passiflora in the supersection Tacsonia.[6]

Bud of the passion flower
Passion flower bloom in water

The leaves are used for feeding by the larvae of a number of species of Lepidoptera. Famously, they are exclusively targeted by many butterfly species of the tribe Heliconiini. The many defensive adaptations visible on Passiflora include diverse leaf shapes (which help disguise their identity), colored nubs (which mimic butterfly eggs and can deter Heliconians from ovipositing on a seemingly crowded leaf), extrafloral nectaries, trichomes, variegation, and chemical defenses.[7] These, combined with adaptations on the part of the butterflies, were important in the foundation of coevolutionary theory.[8][9]

Recent studies have shown that passiflora both grow faster and protect themselves better in high-nitrogen soils. In low-nitrogen environments, passiflora focus on growth rather than defense and are more vulnerable to herbivores.[10]

The following lepidoptera larvae are known to feed on Passiflora:

The generally high pollinator and parasite specificity in Passiflora may have led to the tremendous morphological variation in the genus. It is thought to have among the highest foliar diversity among all plant genera,[16] with leaf shapes ranging from unlobed to five-lobed frequently found on the same plant.[17] Coevolution can be a major driver of speciation, and may be responsible for the radiation of certain clades of Passiflora such as Tacsonia.

The bracts of the stinking passion flower are covered by hairs which exude a sticky fluid. Many small insects get stuck to this and get digested to nutrient-rich goo by proteases and acid phosphatases. Since the insects usually killed are rarely major pests, this passion flower seems to be a protocarnivorous plant.[18]

Banana passion flower or "banana poka" (P. tarminiana), originally from Central Brazil, is an invasive weed, especially on the islands of Hawaii. It is commonly spread by feral pigs eating the fruits. It overgrows and smothers stands of endemic vegetation, mainly on roadsides. Blue passion flower (P. caerulea) is an invasive species in Spain and considered likely to threaten ecosystems there.[5]

On the other hand, some species are endangered due to unsustainable logging and other forms of habitat destruction. For example, the Chilean passion flower (P. pinnatistipula) is a rare vine growing in the Tropical Andes southwards from Venezuela between 2,500 and 3,800 metres (8,200 and 12,500 ft) altitude, and in Coastal Central Chile, where it only occurs in a few tens of square kilometres of fog forest by the sea, near Zapallar. P. pinnatistipula has a round fruit, unusual in Tacsonia group species like banana passion flower and P. mixta, with their elongated tubes and brightly red to rose-colored petals.

Notable and sometimes economically significant pathogens of Passiflora are several sac fungi of the genus Septoria (including S. passiflorae), the undescribed proteobacterium called "Pseudomonas tomato" (pv. passiflorae), the Potyvirus passionfruit woodiness virus, and the Carlavirus Passiflora latent virus.

Uses[edit]

Ornamental[edit]

Passiflora incarnata, one of the most common passion flowers
Passiflora entwine this 1880 Baxter process illustration by Joseph Martin Kronheim

A number of species of Passiflora are cultivated outside their natural range for both their flowers and fruit. Hundreds of hybrids have been named; hybridizing is currently being done extensively for flowers, foliage and fruit. The following hybrids and cultivars have gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit:

During the Victorian era the flower (which in all but a few species lasts only one day) was very popular, and many hybrids were created using the winged-stem passion flower (P. alata), the blue passion flower (P. caerulea) and other tropical species.

Many cool-growing Passiflora from the Andes Mountains can be grown successfully for their beautiful flowers and fruit in cooler Mediterranean climates, such as the Monterey Bay and San Francisco in California and along the western coast of the U.S. into Canada. One blue passion flower or hybrid even grew to large size at Malmö Central Station in Sweden.[22]

Passion flowers have been a subject of studies investigating extranuclear inheritance; paternal inheritance of chloroplast DNA has been documented in this genus.[23] The plastome of the two-flowered passion flower (P. biflora) has been sequenced.

Fruit[edit]

Ripe fruits of Passiflora edulis

Most species have round or elongated edible fruit from 50 to 200 millimetres (2 to 8 in) long and 25–50 mm (1–2 in) across, depending upon the species or cultivar.

  • The passion fruit or maracujá (P. edulis) is cultivated extensively in the Caribbean, South America, south Florida and South Africa for its fruit, which is used as a source of juice. A small pink fruit that wrinkles easily and a larger shiny yellow to orange fruit are traded under this name. The latter is usually considered just a variety of flavicarpa, but seems to be more distinct.[citation needed]
  • Sweet granadilla (P. ligularis) is another widely grown species. In large parts of Africa and Australia it is the plant called "passionfruit": confusingly, in South African English the latter species is more often called granadilla (without an adjective). Its fruit is somewhat intermediate between the two sold as P. edulis.
  • Maypop (P. incarnata), a common species in the southeastern US. This is a subtropical representative of this mostly tropical family. However, unlike the more tropical cousins, this particular species is hardy enough to withstand the cold down to −20 °C (−4 °F) before its roots die (it is native as far north as Pennsylvania and has been cultivated as far north as Boston and Chicago.) The fruit is sweet, yellowish, and roughly the size of a chicken's egg; it enjoys some popularity as a native plant with edible fruit and few pests.
  • Giant granadilla (giant tumbo or badea, P. quadrangularis), water lemon (P. laurifolia) and sweet calabash (P. maliformis) are Passiflora species locally famed for their fruit,[24] but not widely known elsewhere as of 2008.[citation needed]
  • The blue passionflower (Passiflora caerulea) produces bright orange fruit with numerous seeds. While the fruit is edible, it is often described as being bland in comparison to other edible passionfruit, or with a flavour vaguely similar to blackberries.[25]
  • Wild maracuja are the fruit of P. foetida, which are popular in Southeast Asia.
  • Banana passionfruits are the very elongated fruits of P. tripartita var. mollissima and P. tarminiana. These are locally eaten, but their invasive properties make them a poor choice to grow outside of their native range.[26][27]

Ayahuasca analog[edit]

A native source of beta-Carbolines (e.g., passion flower in North America) is mixed with Desmanthus illinoensis (Illinois bundleflower) root bark to produce a hallucinogenic drink called prairiehuasca, which is an analog of the shamanic brew ayahuasca.[28]

Traditional medicine and dietary supplement[edit]

P. incarnata (maypop) leaves and roots have a long history of use as a traditional medicine by Native Americans in North America and were adapted by European colonists.[29][30] The fresh or dried leaves of maypop are used to make a tea that is used as a sedative.[29] Passionflower as dried powder or an extract is used as a dietary supplement.[29] There is insufficient clinical evidence for using passionflower to treat any medical condition.[29][30]

Passionflower is classified as generally recognized as safe (GRAS) for use as a food ingredient in the United States.[31]

Adverse effects[edit]

Passion flower is not recommended during pregnancy because it may induce contractions.[29][30] Consuming passion flower products may cause drowsiness, nausea, dizziness, abnormal heart rhythms, asthma, or rhinitis.[29][30]

Chemistry[edit]

Chrysin, a commercially important flavone found in the blue passion flower, P. caerulea
Harman, a harmala alkaloid found in many species of Passiflora

Many species of Passiflora have been found to contain beta-carboline harmala alkaloids,[30][32][33] some of which are MAO inhibitors. The flower and fruit have only traces of these chemicals, but the leaves and the roots often contain more.[33] The most common of these alkaloids is harman, but harmaline, harmalol, harmine, and harmol are also present.[30][32] The species known to bear such alkaloids include: P. actinia, P. alata (winged-stem passion flower), P. alba, P. bryonioides (cupped passion flower), P. caerulea (blue passion flower), P. capsularis, P. decaisneana, P. edulis (passion fruit), P. eichleriana, P. foetida (stinking passion flower), P. incarnata (maypop), P. quadrangularis (giant granadilla), P. suberosa, P. subpeltata and P. warmingii.[32]

Other compounds found in passion flowers are coumarins (e.g. scopoletin and umbelliferone), maltol, phytosterols (e.g. lutenin) and cyanogenic glycosides (e.g. gynocardin) which render some species, i.e. P. adenopoda, somewhat poisonous. Many flavonoids and their glycosides have been found in Passiflora, including apigenin, benzoflavone, homoorientin, 7-isoorientin, isoshaftoside, isovitexin (or saponaretin), kaempferol, lucenin, luteolin, n-orientin, passiflorine (named after the genus), quercetin, rutin, saponarin, shaftoside, vicenin and vitexin. Maypop, blue passion flower (P. caerulea), and perhaps others contain the flavone chrysin. Also documented to occur at least in some Passiflora in quantity are the hydrocarbon nonacosane and the anthocyanidin pelargonidin-3-diglycoside.[30][32][34]

The genus is rich in organic acids including formic, butyric, linoleic, linolenic, malic, myristic, oleic and palmitic acids as well as phenolic compounds, and the amino acid α-alanine. Esters like ethyl butyrate, ethyl caproate, n-hexyl butyrate and n-hexyl caproate give the fruits their flavor and appetizing smell. Sugars, contained mainly in the fruit, are most significantly d-fructose, d-glucose and raffinose. Among enzymes, Passiflora was found to be rich in catalase, pectin methylesterase and phenolase.[30][32]

Etymology and names[edit]

Blue passion flower (P. caerulea) showing most elements of the Christian symbolism
Passiflora 'Soi Fah', a.k.a. Krishnakamala in India

The passion in passion flower refers to the passion of Jesus in Christian theology;[35] the word passion comes from the Latin passio, meaning 'suffering'. In the 15th and 16th centuries, Spanish Christian missionaries adopted the unique physical structures of this plant, particularly the numbers of its various flower parts, as symbols of the last days of Jesus and especially his crucifixion:[36]

The flower has been given names related to this symbolism throughout Europe since the 15th century. In Spain, it is known as espina de Cristo ('thorn of Christ'). Older Germanic names[38] include Christus-Krone ('Christ's crown'), Christus-Strauss ('Christ's bouquet'),[39] Dorn-Krone ('crown of thorns'), Jesus-Lijden ('Jesus' passion'), Marter ('passion')[40] or Muttergottes-Stern ('Mother of God's star').[41]

Outside the Roman Catholic heartland, the regularly shaped flowers have reminded people of the face of a clock. In Israel they are known as "clock-flower" (שעונית) and in Greece as "clock plant" (ρολογιά); in Japan too, they are known as tokeisō (時計草, 'clock plant'). In Hawaiian, they are called lilikoʻi;[42] is a string used for tying fabric together, such as a shoelace, and liko means 'to spring forth leave'.[43]

In India, it is known as Krishnakamala because of its dark violet blue colour which resembles Bhagwan Krishna.

Taxonomy[edit]

Passiflora is the most species rich genus of both the family Passifloraceae and the tribe Passifloreae. With over 550 species, an extensive hierarchy of infrageneric ranks is required to represent the relationships of the species. The infrageneric classification of Passiflora not only uses the widely used ranks of subgenus, section and series, but also the rank of supersection.

The New World species of Passiflora were first divided among 22 subgenera by Killip (1938) in the first monograph of the genus.[16] More recent work has reduced these to 4, which are commonly accepted today (in order from most basally to most recently branching):[44]

  • Astrophea (Americas, ~60 species), trees and shrubs with simple, unlobed leaves
  • Passiflora (Americas, ~250 species), woody vines with large flowers and elaborate corolla
  • Deidamioides (Americas, 13 species), woody or herbaceous vines
  • Decaloba (Americas, Asia and Australasia, ~230 species), herbaceous vines with palmately veined leaves

Some studies have shown that the segregate Old World genera Hollrungia and Tetrapathaea are nested within Passiflora, and form a fifth subgenus (Tetrapathaea).[45] Other studies support the current four subgenus classification.[46]

Relationships below the subgenus level are not known with certainty and are an active area of research. The Old World species form two clades – supersection Disemma (part of subgenus Decaloba) and subgenus Tetrapathaea. The former is composed of 21 species divided into sections Disemma (three Australian species), Holrungiella (one New Guinean species) and Octandranthus (seventeen south and east Asian species).[47]

The remaining (New World) species of subgenus Decaloba are divided into seven supersections. Supersection Pterosperma includes four species from Central America and southern Mexico. Supersection Hahniopathanthus includes five species from Central America, Mexico and northernmost South America. Supersection Cicea includes nineteen species, with apetalous flowers. Supersection Bryonioides includes twenty-one species, with a distribution centered on Mexico. Supersection Auriculata includes eight species from South America, one of which is also found in Central America. Supersection Multiflora includes nineteen species. Supersection Decaloba includes 123 species.[48]

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Passiflora | International Plant Names Index. (n.d.). Retrieved January 8, 2024, from https://www.ipni.org/n/328300-2
  2. ^ "Passiflora L." Plants of the World Online. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  3. ^ a b Ulmer, Torsten; McDougal, John M. (2004). Passiflora - Passion Flowers of the World. Portland: Timber Press. pp. 158–159.
  4. ^ Krosnick, S.E.; Porter-Utley, K.E.; MacDougal, J.M.; Jørgensen, P.M.; McDade, L.A. (2013). "New insights into the evolution of Passiflora subgenus Decaloba (Passifloraceae): phylogenetic relationships and morphological synapomorphies". Systematic Botany. 38 (3): 692–713. doi:10.1600/036364413x670359. S2CID 85840835.
  5. ^ a b Sanz-Elorza, M.; Dana, E.; Sobrino, E. (2001). "Listado de plantas alóctonas invasoras reales y potenciales en España". Lazaroa. 22. Retrieved 10 October 2023.
  6. ^ Abrahamczyk, S. (2014). "Escape from extreme specialization: passionflowers, bats and the sword-billed hummingbird". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 281 (1795): 20140888. doi:10.1098/rspb.2014.0888. PMC 4213610. PMID 25274372.
  7. ^ de Castro, É.C.P.; Zagrobelny, M.; Cardoso, M.Z.; Bak, S. (2017). "The arms race between heliconiine butterflies and Passiflora plants - new insights on an ancient subject". Biological Reviews. 93 (1): 555–573. doi:10.1111/brv.12357. PMID 28901723. S2CID 23953807.
  8. ^ Ehrlich, P.R.; Raven, P.H. (1964). "Butterflies and Plants: A Study in Coevolution". Evolution. 18 (4): 586–608. doi:10.2307/2406212. JSTOR 2406212.
  9. ^ Benson, W.W; Brown, K.S.; Gilbert, L.E. (1975). "Coevolution of plants and herbivores: passion flower butterflies". Evolution. 29 (4): 659–680. doi:10.2307/2407076. JSTOR 2407076. PMID 28563089.
  10. ^ Morrison, Colin R.; Hart, Lauren; Wolf, Amelia A.; Sedio, Brian E.; Armstrong, Wyatt; Gilbert, Lawrence E. (3 March 2024). "Growth‐chemical defence‐metabolomic expression trade‐off is relaxed as soil nutrient availability increases for a tropical passion vine". Functional Ecology. doi:10.1111/1365-2435.14537. ISSN 0269-8463.
  11. ^ Merrill, R.M.; Naisbit, R.E.; Mallet, J.; Jiggins, C.D. (2013). "Ecological and genetic factors influencing the transition between host-use strategies in sympatric Heliconius butterflies" (PDF). Journal of Evolutionary Biology. 26 (9): 1959–1967. doi:10.1111/jeb.12194. PMID 23961921. S2CID 11632731.
  12. ^ Knight, R.J.; Payne, J.A.; Schnell, R.J.; Amis, A.A. (1995). "'Byron Beauty', An Ornamental Passion Vine for the Temperate Zone" (PDF). HortScience. 30 (5): 1112. doi:10.21273/HORTSCI.30.5.1112.
  13. ^ Neck, Raymond W. (1976). "Lepidopteran Foodplant Records from Texas" (PDF). Journal of Research on the Lepidoptera. 15 (2): 75–82. doi:10.5962/p.333709. S2CID 248733989. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  14. ^ Soule, J.A. 2012. Butterfly Gardening in Southern Arizona. Tierra del Soule Press, Tucson, AZ
  15. ^ a b c Nitin, Ravikanthachari; Balakrishnan, V. C.; Churi, Paresh V.; Kalesh, S.; Prakash, Satya; Kunte, Krushnamegh (10 April 2018). "Larval host plants of the butterflies of the Western Ghats, India". Journal of Threatened Taxa. 10 (4): 11495. doi:10.11609/jott.3104.10.4.11495-11550. ISSN 0974-7907.
  16. ^ a b Killip, E.P. (1938). The American Species of Passifloraceae. Chicago, US: Field Museum of Natural History.
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