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Ipomoea cairica (syn. Convolvulus cairicus)
Ipomoea cairica is a vining, herbaceous, perennial plant with palmate leaves and large, showy white to lavender flowers. A species of morning glory, it has many common names, including coastal morning glory, Messina creeper, Cairo morning glory, and railroad creeper. (Wikipedia). Not an Australian native, it has particularly rampant growth and is considered an invasive species. Mile-a-minute has very distinctive leaves which are 5-7 finger-like lobes, and the flower, while still being the characteristic blue-pink-lavender colour, has a dark throat, although there is a rarer white-flowered variant of this species also. The second reference provides detail information on this and other similar Ipomoea species found in Australia.
Spotted along the track at Oxley Creek Common, in the Brisbane suburb of Rocklea. This is a low-lying, flood-prone grassland area adjacent to Oxley Creek, with a thin line of mangroves along its banks. This provides a corridor for animals to move through the area.
In Australian bushland, some species of morning glory develop thick roots and tend to grow in dense thickets. They can quickly spread by way of long, creeping stems. By crowding out, blanketing and smothering other plants, morning glory has turned into a serious invasive weed problem. Here's a spotting I made some years ago of blue morning glory (Ipomoea indica), and it has done just that!.... https://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/20... Note the leaf shape and pale-throated flower, and how it differs from this spotting.
2 Comments
I think everyone has a problem with morning glory! One of those beautiful garden ornamentals that people just needed to have. And where do they go to get these plants? Will we ever learn?
Great spotting and notes, Neil! We have morning glory problems here too.