Passiflora alata
Passiflora alata, the winged-stem passion flower, is a species of flowering plant. It is an evergreen vine, growing to or more, which bears an edible type of passion fruit. It is native to the Amazon, from Peru to eastern Brazil.
Names
The local peoples refer to it as ouvaca, meaning "red star" due to the appearance of its flower. Other names include fragrant grenadilla, and maracuja de refresco. The specific epithet alata means "winged", referring to the 4-winged stems.Description
The leaves are oval or oblong, long and wide. The fragrant flower is wide, with red curved tepals, and a prominent fringed corona in bands of purple and white giving the appearance of stripes. It usually blooms around late summer or early fall, needing full sun exposure. These flowers are unique in having eight concentric coronas divided into five types; radii, pali. the operculum, the limen, and the trochlea, the most of any known plant., P. alata attracts bees, butterflies and birds.The solitary fruit is highly prized by local people. It is egg-shaped, yellow to bright orange, long and in diameter. It weighs from.