Anredera
Anredera is a genus of plants native to Latin America, the West Indies, Texas, and Florida. Some are naturalized in other regions. Most of them evergreen vines of dry scrubland and thickets. Members of the genus are commonly known as Madeira vines. At least one species, A. cordifolia, bears edible roots or tubers and leaves similar to those of Basella alba. The same species has become an invasive plant in many tropical and subtropical regions outside its natural range.
Species
Accepted species:- Anredera aspera Sperling - Bolivia
- Anredera baselloides Baill. - Gulf Madeira vine - Ecuador, Peru; naturalized in Bermuda, Dominican Republic
- Anredera brachystachys Sperling - Colombia, Ecuador
- Anredera cordifolia Steenis - Heart-leaf Madeira vine - South America from Venezuela to Argentina; naturalized in Mexico, Central America, California, Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Puerto Rico, Bermuda, southern Europe, Morocco, Canary Islands, Azores, southern China, India, New Zealand, Polynesia, St. Helena, Cape Verde, Madeira
- Anredera densiflora Sperling - Ecuador, Peru
- Anredera diffusa Sperling - Peru
- Anredera floribunda Sperling - Colombia
- Anredera krapovickasii Sperling - Bolivia, Argentina
- Anredera marginata Sperling - Ecuador, Peru, Brazil
- Anredera ramosa Eliasson - central + southern Mexico, Central America, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia, Galápagos
- Anredera tucumanensis Sperling - Ecuador, Bolivia, southern Brazil, Tucumán Province of Argentina
- Anredera vesicaria Gaertn f. - Texas Madeira vine - Mexico, Central America, West Indies, Venezuela, Florida, Texas