Black bindweed (Fallopia convolvulus) flowers and fruit. Bottom: a single flower nestled in a leaf axil seen face-on (left) and from the side. The flowers never open more than seen here. Top: a flower stalk beafing flower buds at its tip, an open flower, and a series of ripening fruits more basally. The ant os for scale.
Black bindweed flowers develop in singletons or pairs from the leaf axils or directly from the stem. Flowers are 1/8-1/4″ long; they have 3-5 greenish-white, white, or light purple petal-like tepals, the outer three tepals with a ridge or keel down the midline on the outer surface. Six to eight stamens with purple anthers surround fused green styles with a dome-shaped stigma in the middle of the flower; the flower usually opens only partially (like a tulip). The fruit is three-sided, with a tubercle-covered surface, about 1/4″ long, black when fully mature. Black bindweed is very similar to climbing false buckwheat (Fallopia scandens).
Black bindweed (Fallopia convolvulus) leaves. Left: a arrowhead-shaped leaf attached to the main stem with a flower stalk coming of to the right. Right: views of a single leaf showing the top surface (above) and the underside (below).
Black bindweed is a sprawling vine that can get up to 8′ long with occasional branches along the way. leaves are alternate, widely spaced, heart- or arrowhead-shaped, 2.5″ long and about 1″ wide, on long petioles that have a brown membranous sheath (ocrea) at their base that enwrap the stem (often shed as the leaf ages). Leaf margins are smooth. Black bindweed is very similar to climbing false buckwheat (Fallopia scandens).
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