Australian Tropical Rainforest - Online edition suberosa L. Family: Linnaeus, C. von (1753) Species Plantarum 2: 958. Type: Dominica, probably Hispaniola; holo: ?. Common name: Corky Passion Vine; Small Passion Flower; Cork Passionflower; Small Passion Fruit; Vine Corky Passion; Corky Passion Flower Stem A slender vine not exceeding a stem diameter of 2 cm. blades lobed or smooth. Lobed blades about 4.5-8 x 3.5-6.5 cm, smooth blades about 2-4.2 x 1.2-2.5 cm. Petioles about 0.5-2.5 cm long with two globular glands attached to the sides of the usually, but not always, along the upper half of the petiole. Stipules linear, about 6-7 mm long. Lateral veins 5 or 6 on each side of the midrib. Tendrils simple (unbranched), axillary. Flowers Flower [not vouchered]. © Australian Tropical Herbarium Flowers about 18-20 mm diam., stalks about 13-15 mm long, articulated in the upper half. Calyx tube flat, disk-like at the apex, about 5-6 mm diam. Calyx lobes or perianth lobes about 8-9 mm long. True petals absent. Corona in four whorls decreasing in size towards the centre. Stamens attached to a gynophore about 2 mm long. Free staminal filaments about 2.5 mm long, anthers about 1.7 mm long. Styles three, free from one another, curved, each about 4 mm long. Stigmas clavate. Fruit Fruits globular to ellipsoid, about 10-12 x 10-11 mm. Seeds numerous, each seed flattened, obovoid or tear-drop shaped in outline, about 3 x 2 mm. Testa pitted and corrugated. Aril or sarcotesta Leaves and flower [not enveloping each seed. Embryo about 2 mm long, cotyledons +/- orbicular, about 0.9-1 mm long. vouchered]. © Australian Tropical Radicle about 1 x 0.3 mm. Herbarium Seedlings Features not available. Distribution and Ecology An introduced species originally from tropical , now naturalised in NT, CYP, NEQ, CEQ and southwards as far as coastal central New South Wales. Altitudinal range in northern Australia from near sea level to 500 m. Grows in vine thicket, monsoon forest, disturbed lowland and upland rain forest and old settlement sites. Also naturalised in India, SE Asia, Malesia and the Pacific islands. Natural History & Notes Leaves and Flowers. © CSIRO Experimental proof of toxicity of this species is not available but field evidence has indicated poisoning of cattle and ducks. Everist (1974). A widespread weed that can smother vegetation, the seeds are spread by birds. Synonyms Passiflora suberosa var. minima Mast., Transactions of the Linnean Society of London, Botany 27 : 630(1871), Type: Brazil; holo: ?. RFK Code 2624

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