Common morning glory (Ipomoea purpurea) flowers. Bottom: the main color morph of common morning glory is deep purple (right) but a reddish-purple variant also occurs (left). Top: a flower seen from the side. The vine has twined around another plant (white arrow); the flower can be seen to arise from a leaf axil. Note that the sepals of the calyx (main image, left insert) are triangular, not narrowly lance-shaped as in ivy-leaved morning glory.
Common morning glory is a vine up to 10 feet long with alternate, heart-shaped (never lobed), smooth-margined, almost as wide as long. The stem is green or reddish-purple, covered with long hairs; it twines around adjacent vegetation and objects. Cymes of 1-5 flowers arise from some leaf axils; they sit at the tip of about 4″ long pedicels. The flowers are 2-3.5″ wide, funnel-shaped, usually deep purple or pink, less commonly blue or white, a single style with a three-lobed stigma, and five stamens. Sepals are relatively short, hairy, and triangular unlike ivy-leaved morning glory (I. hederacea), where the sepals are long and narrow. Other morning glories (Ipomoea sp.) usually have lobed leaves; the superficially-similar bindweeds usually have arrowhead-shaped leaves, not heart-shaped. Common morning glory has sepals that are short and triangular, unlike ivy-leaved morning glory where the sepals are relatively very long and narrow. Common morning glory is native to Mexico; it was introduced to England by 1621, then introduced from England to North America around 1700 as an ornamental (Fang et al., 2013), where it rapidly escaped cultivation.
Common morning-glory (Ipomoea purpurea) leaves. Top: the heart-shaped leaves of common morning glory, with a short length of stem and several leaf petioles visible. Bottom: two other examples of the heart-shaped leaves.
Common morning glory is a vine up to 10 feet long with alternate, heart-shaped (never lobed), smooth-margined, almost as wide as long. The stem is green or reddish-purple, covered with long hairs; it twines around adjacent vegetation and objects. The petioles are hairy and about the same length as the leaf. Other morning glories (Ipomoea sp.) usually have lobed leaves; the superficially-similar bindweeds usually have arrowhead-shaped leaves, not heart-shaped. Common morning glory has sepals that are short and triangular, unlike ivy-leaved morning glory where the sepals are relatively very long and narrow. Common morning glory is native to Mexico; it was introduced to England by 1621, then introduced from England to North America around 1700 as an ornamental (Fang et al., 2013), where it rapidly escaped cultivation.
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