Bignonia capreolata L., Sp. Pl. 624 1753. (syn: Anisostichus capreolata (L.) Bureau; Batocydia capreolata Mart. ex DC. [Invalid]; Bignonia capreolata var. atro-sanguinea Hook.f.; Bignonia capreolata f. lutea Heineke; Doxantha capreolata (L.) Miers);
C. & E. U.S.A. as per WCSP;
Climber for ID : Bignoniaceae : Atlanta Botanical Garden : Atlanta, Georgia : 11NOV18 : AK-11 : 11 posts by 4 authors. Attachments (4) Can you help me with this climber?
Climber with orange flowers seen at the garden on 20th Oct,18.
Is this Bignonia capreolata? Just a guess.
I guess it is matching.
amphilophium buccinatoria
To me calyx looks different from images at Amphilophium buccinatorium
Can we think of Bignonia capreolata?
Just a guess.
Or Bignonia capreolata var. atrosanguinea? Red Cross Vine?
This climber has been identified as Bignonia capreolata by Master Gardener Toni, from the University of Georgia.
My guess was correct.
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Category: Bignonia
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Bignonia capreolata (USA)
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Bignonia species- Muscat, Oman
Ornamental Climber For ID : 20MAY17 : AK-15 : 9 posts by 5 authors. Attachments (3)A cultivated climber seen in a garden in Muscat.
There were no flowers.
Looks like Petrea volubilis
Thanks … Let me wait for the flowers.
Yes. It is Petrea.
Will wait for it to flower.The upper leaves are smaller in size, reminds me of Jasminum Species.
if the leaves are rough in texture, just like sand paper then it is Petrea volubilis otherwise please check beumontia
I checked the leaves yesterday. They are not rough like sand paper.But thick and rubbery. Like Banyan leaf.
To me looks different from images at
It was just a suggested id.
I am eager to find the id of this climber.Thanks for the links.
Do not look like any one suggested.
Beaumontia leaves that I have seen are much bigger.I have added the flowers later.Probably some Bignonia Species.
Here is the post with flowers.Looks close to your post of Bignonia callistegioides.
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Bignonia aequinoctialis
Bignonia aequinoctialis L., Sp. Pl. 623 1753. (Syn: Anemopaegma tonduzianum Kraenzl.; Arrabidaea guatemalensis K.Schum. & Loes.; Arrabidaea isthmica Standl.; Arrabidaea pseudochica Kraenzl.; Bignonia aequinoctialis var. spectabilis (Vahl) DC.; Bignonia aequinoctialis f. spectabilis (Vahl) Voss; Bignonia hostmannii E.Mey.; Bignonia incarnata Aubl.; Bignonia incarnata Aublet sec. Splitg.; Bignonia incarnata var. caribaea DC.; Bignonia nitidissima DC.; Bignonia picta Kunth; Bignonia pilosa A.Dietr. ex Steud.; Bignonia sarmentosa Bertol.; Bignonia sarmentosa var. hirtella Benth.; Bignonia spectabilis Vahl; Bignonia villosa Vahl; Cydista aequinoctialis (L.) Miers; Cydista aequinoctialis var. aequinoctialis ; Cydista aequinoctialis var. hirtella (Benth.) A.H.Gentry; Cydista aequinoctialis var. sarmentosa (Bertol.) Govaerts; Cydista amoena Miers [Invalid]; Cydista incarnata (Aubl.) Miers; Cydista picta (Kunth) Miers; Cydista pubescens S.F.Blake; Cydista sarmentosa (Bertol.) Miers; Cydista seemannii Miers; Cydista spectabilis (Vahl) Miers; Levya nicaraguensis Bureau; Macfadyena bifolia Miers; Mansoa kerere var. incarnata (Aubl.) A.H.Gentry; Pachyptera kerere var. incarnata (Aubl.) A.H.Gentry; Smithiantha incarnata (Aubl.) M.R.Almeida (Unresolved); Tecoma villosa (Vahl) Bureau & K.Schum.; Temnocydia aequinoctialis Mart. ex DC. [Invalid]; Temnocydia spectabilis Mart. ex DC.);N-Brazil (Roraima, Amapa, Para, Amazonas, Tocantins, Acre, Rondonia), NE-Brazil
(Maranhao), WC-Brazil (Mato Grosso, Goias), SE-Brazil (Minas Gerais, Espirito
Santo, Rio de Janeiro), Venezuela (Amazonas, Anzoategui, Apure, Aragua, Barinas,
Bolivar, Carabobo, Delta Amacuro, Distrito Federal, Falcon, Guarico, Lara,
Merida, Miranda, Monagas, Nueva Esparta, Portuguesa, Sucre, Tachira, Trujillo,
Zulia), Mexico (Chiapas, Colima, Guerrero, Jalisco, Michoacan, Morelos, Nayarit,
Oaxaca, Quintana Roo, San Luis Potosi, Sinaloa, Tabasco, Tamaulipas, Veracruz,
Yucatan), Costa Rica, Belize, Cuba, Hispaniola, Puerto Rico, Virgin Isl. (St.
Croix, St. John, St. Thomas), Lesser Antilles (Antigua, Barbados, Dominica,
Grenada, Grenadines, Guadeloupe, Marie Galante, Martinique, St. Lucia, St.
Vincent), Isla Margarita, Nicaragua, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia (Beni, La Paz,
Pando, Santa Cruz), Guyana, Surinam, French Guiana, Panama, Colombia (Amazonas,
Antioquia, Arauca, Atlntico, Bolvar, Boyac, Caldas, Caquet, Cauca, Cesar, Choc,
Crdoba, Cundinamarca, Guaina, Guaviare, Magdalena, Meta, Nario, Norte de
Santander, Santander, Sucre, Tolima, Valle, Vaups, Vichada), Guatemala,
Honduras, El Salvador, Trinidad, Tobago, Southern Marianas (I) (Guam (I)),
Myanmar [Burma] (I) as per Catalogue of life;
Bignoniaceae Week: Looking for Cydista aequinoctialis (L.) Miers: Cydista aequinoctialis (L.) Miers now correctly known as Bignonia aequinoctialis L. has often been confused with Mansoa alliacea, (the garlic vine), but is quite distinct in lacking the garlic smell. It has been discussed in detail in a previous thread.I am reproducing the key from that thread, hoping that some member finds and uploads the above plant. There is so much confusion that name garlic vine has often been associated with this plant also.1. Fruit valves costate, acuminate, plant with garlic odor when bruised or broken; inflorescence racemose on small lateral branchlets calyx-limb flaring, corolla lavender . . . . . . . . Mansoa 1. Fruit valves not notably costate, odor when broken not alliaceous. Inflorescence a twice or more trichotomous cymose panicle, leaflet bases rounded or broadly cuneate, pseudostipules inconspicuous or early caducous, tendril often present and conspicuous; calyx-limb not notably flaring; corolla limb whitish to pink or lavender. . . . . . . . Cydista (Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (many correct images) and New field guide describing the lianas of Barro Colorado Island (BCI), Panama for Bignonia aequinoctialis)
References: -
Bignonia callistegioides (Cultivated)
Bignonia callistegioides Cham., Linnaea 7: 712 1832. (Syn: Bignonia lindleyi DC.; Bignonia picta Lindl. [Illegitimate]; Bignonia speciosa Graham; Bignonia speciosa Tweedie ex Hook.; Clytostoma callistegioides (Cham.) Baill. (Unresolved); Clytostoma uniflorum K.Schum. ex Bureau & K.Schum.; Cuspidaria callistegioides (Cham.) DC.; Pithecoctenium callistegioides (Cham.) Niederl.);Bolivia (Tarija), Argentina (Buenos Aires, Corrientes, Entre Rios, Jujuy,
Mendoza, Misiones, Salta), S-Brazil (Rio Grande do Sul), Paraguay (Alto
Paraguay, Central), Uruguay (Canelones, Cerro Largo, Florida Prov., Montevideo,
Rio Negro, Salto, Soriano), Peru (I), Costa Rica, Taiwan (I), trop. Africa (I),
India (I), Pakistan (I) as per Catalogue of Life;
Bignoniaceae Week: Bignonia callistegioides from California:
Bignonia callistegioides Cham., Linnaea 7:712. 1833Syn: Clytostoma callistegioides (Cham.) Bureau ex Griseb.; Cuspidaria callistegioides (Cham.) DC.Common names: Argentine trumpetvine, love-charmEvergreen climbing shrub with opposite leaves, each with two 5-10 cm long elliptic-oblong, glabrous and lustrous undulate leaflets and simple tendril; flowers lavender, streaked, 6-8 cm long; calyx lobes long pointed; corolla lobes spreading, oval and wavy; pod 7-12 cm long, prickly.Photographed from Sunnyvale, California.
References: -
Bignonia magnifica (Cultivated)
Bignonia magnifica W.Bull, Gard. Chron. 2: 73 1879. (Syn. Arrabidaea magnifica (W.Bull) Sprague ex Steenis; Saritaea magnifica (W.Bull) Dugand);.Colombia (Atlntico, Cesar, Magdalena, Norte de Santander, Risaralda, Santander, Valle), Ecuador, Panama, Java (I), Taiwan (I), Jamaica (I), Puerto Rico (I), Dominican Republic (I), Mexico (I), Fiji (I), New Caledonia (I), Malesia (I), Thailand (I), trop. Africa (I), Society Isl. (I)(Tahiti (I), Tetiaroa Atoll (I)), Myanmar [Burma] (I), India (I), Bangladesh (I), Trinidad & Tobago (I) as per Catalogue of life;.Glow Vine, Purple funnel vine, Purple bignonia;.
Bignoniaceae Week :: Saritaea magnifica at Nagpur:: PKA10:: Came across this Climber at Nagpur. (Cultivated variety)
Bot. name: Saritaea magnifica
Family: Bignoniaceae
Now Bignonia magnifica
Bignoniaceae week :: Non natives : SMP : Bignonia magnifica Pune.: Bignonia magnifica Syn. Saritaea magnifica
A climber with Big Bell shaped flowers.
Leaves glossy with two leaflets.
Bignoniaceae week:: Bignonia magnifica from CCS HAU Botanical Garden Hisar Haryana: Bignonia magnifica from CCS HAU Botanical Garden Hisar Haryana
shot in dec 2011
Flora of Haryana: 26122011BS1-Apocynaceae shrub for id from Botanical garden CCSHAU Hisar: (16 images)
Apocynaceae shrub for id from Botanical garden CCSHAU Hisar shot on 16-12-2011large shrub about 5-6 feet. Flowers violet colored and zygomorphicNamed as Allamanda violacea on name plate their. As it is in synonym with A blenchetii but i dont agree with name plate, nothing concrete could be found on googling
I can see the leaves as 2 foliolate. Flower appears Bignoniaceae and not Apocyanaceae.
It is Bignonia magnifica Syn. Saritaea magnifica. Check my post of the same plant posted recently.
I Think you r right … Thanks for the id
148-TSP-ID-30JAN2018-3:An ornamental shrub near Chikmagalur for ID assistance : 7 posts by 4 authors. Attachments (3)
Kindly examine and identify this plant
Habit: Shrub
Habitat: Cultivated along the hedges
Sighting: Near Chikmagalur,Karnataka,about 1200 msl
Date: 12-09-2015
Looks like some ornamental Thunbergia.
I think Saritaea magnifica– Glow Vine
Matches with Bignonia magnifica Syn:Saritaea magnifica.Thanks again …
Flower for id pl.
Location – Dattaji Salvi Garden, Thane ( Maharashtra)
Date – March. 2018
Front view?
couldn’t get another view because of it’s height.
Bignonia magnifica
ID confirmation MS020211 – 13- Bignonia sps.: One of the Cultivated Bignonia species. Straggling shrub
I think this is Clytostoma callistegioides (Cham.) Bureau ex Griseb. (Syn: Bignonia violacea, Bignonia speciosa, Bignonia callistegioides).
This looks like Bignonia magnifica to me.
at Nagpur– Oct’09?; Saritaea magnifica?? – indiantreepix | Google Groups
Bignoniaceae Week : Saritaea magnifica : Purple Bignonia : Kandy,Sri Lanka : 080113 : AK:Sharing pictures of Purple Bignonia from Kandy, Sri Lanka seen during a visit in November, 2010.
Purple Bignonia for ID : 090111 : AK-2: Is it Purple Bignonia as in Flowers of India?
Pictures taken at Kandy, Sri Lanka on the 17th of November,2010.
The vine was found growing wild against a stone wall.
To me it looks more as Adenocalymma alliaceum– the Lahsun Bel of Bignoniaceae.
I have sent the photographs of Adenocalymma alliaceum in a separate mail. You may compare. The most important feature of the A.alliaceum is: when you crush the leaves and smell they smell like garlic. This is the confirmation for A.a. Nevertheless, the pictures sent by .. looks like Bignonia species for me.
The Lahsun bel that you have mentioned…I am familiar with those flowers. They come in bunches & are smaller in size. Will post them in a seperate thread.
These are different and much bigger in size like Yellow Allamanda. They look to me like Saritaea magnifica as in flowersofindia.net Common names Glow Vine or Purple Bignonia.
Please check.
Pseudocalymma alliaceum
Family: Bignoniaceae
Common Name: Lasun Vel
It is a big woody climber. The leaves, if crushed emit garlic-like smell. However, the flowers are mildly & pleasantly scented. Suitable for arches & pergolas.
This is Arrabidaea magnifica
Also, thanks to all others who were trying to identify it for me.
It is exactly the same I had mentioned when I posted the pictures initially…..as in Flowers of India.
Common names Purple Bignonia, Glow Vine or Purple Funnel Vine.
efloraofindia. ID 290811 BRS 10: Pl. confirm the id. of the attached photo.
Is it glow vine Saritaea magnifica ?
Place: Anaikatti.
Date: 27.08.2011
Alt: 630 MSL
Botanical Garden, planted as an ornamental climber (almost 4 years old)
Yes I agree with .. it is Arrabidaea magnifica. The new name of this plant is Bignonia magnifica W.Bull of Bignoniaceae family.
A mid sized climber planted in a private bungalow. Growing to almost 8-10 meters.
Flowers purple violet.8-10 cm.
Leaves 2-foliolate. Leaflets obovate. 5-6 cm
I think this is some species of Distictella.
Yes Bignonia magnifica W.Bull (syn: Saritaea magnifica (W.Bull) Dugand)
It is Bignonia magnifica Syn. Saritaea magnifica as per The plant List.
Mansoa alliacea :: Puducherry :: 16 OCT 19 : 33 posts by 6 authors. 2 images.
Puducherry near sea coastDate: October 16, 2019 … Altitude range: about 0 – 3 m (0 – 10 feet) aslMansoa alliacea (Lam.) A.H.Gentry
garlic vine. i love this color. looks spectacular in the morning sun
ID is correct. It is very common in Mysore city. Please check my article on this plant in Star of Mysore at:
https://starofmysore.com/the-garlic-vine-an-amazing-vine-from-the-wilderness-of-amazon/
Thanks very much … for link to your article. Quite informational. About name in Kannada or any language in India where it is planted as an ornamental, it can be christened as literal translation of “garlic vine”. In Marathi, the name is लसूण वेल lasun vel !! Many names in other parts of world too, are so !
It is not Lahsun bel.
Of course there is a look alike plant with few minor differences. But I am not able to provide the details right now. Nevertheless, the simple test for ID is the leaves when crushed (by hands) smell like garlic.
This seems to be Saritaea magnifica. The Glow Vine.
And not the Garlic Vine.
what featrues differentiate Saritaa magnifica from the garlic vine in these two photographs?
Thanks very very much … for pointing to correct ID. Will correct my notes as soon as possible, tomorrow.… The stems (of Saritaea magnifica) are almost round in cross-section, and are marked with longitudinal stripes. Wikipedia.I can see that in the second posted pic.Here is a cropped version of where it can be seen as described. Photo quality not good.Attachments (1)
Thank you, … I do see it now. thats scientific. but I wanted to know from … they are gardeners
i would like to know what does a gardener see in these two pictures that gave them the differences. it would help all non-botanists… like me
One need to check all the characters (vegetative & reproductive) before arriving at the final ID on the posting …. Let us wait for the comments from other learned members of the group, as well. Nevertheless, the article on which I have written is Garlic vine only. Meanwhile, I request … to post few more photos, if available.
I am surprised to note that you are a non-botanist with a sound knowledge of botany, especially Taxonomy !
I’m not good at describing the minute differences, nor am I a gardener. I just relate to plants.The flowers and leaves here are much larger, and flowers are few, unlike a cluster of flowers in Garlic Vine.
Thanks a lot. … but that is a recipe for making mistakes.in this case you were correct, Though but i have seen large clusters of flowers in a garlic vine in a botanical garden of repute. it was labelled
Those are the only two photos I have …Personally, I now believe that the plant must be Saritaea magnifica … synonym of Bignonia magnifica.
you will be correct in your inference. I am NOT a botanist. I believe in being scientific, that’s all but also humanistic and believe in ANEKANTAVAAD , which says many opinions may be// are going to be…. correct, so respect all opinions. so I keep an open mind. but my students will tell you i am a task master and say that they love me !!! go figure.:) 🙂 A task master who is loved????I am also a Physician and good at differential diagnosis. insist on it otherwise the patients will suffer. And that’s also me.And as far as botany is concerned, I also believe that the Earth is evolving continuously. hence what was described a hundred or two hundred years ago may not hold true now !!!
like the tree line moving up the mountains and glaciers disappearing, so nothing is written in stone.
That’s exactly what I meant. Garlic Vine has flowers in clusters, unlike the one posted above.
Probably you did not read my mail.
i read everything carefully and i also responded that :
but i have seen large clusters of flowers in a garlic vine in a botanical garden of repute. it was labelled
… your article shows garlic vine, there is no doubts about that
good descriptionhttps://www.inaturalist.org/guide_taxa/75140#ref5
Bignonia magnifica Mansoa alliacea I am posting pictures of Garlic vine and Glow vine from my place. Photos taken by me. Glow vine is a compact vine that may be shaped into a large shrub, while Garlic vine is a hardy climber.
Attachments (4)
Pl check this link for Glow vine: toptropicals
Further, my article sent earlier is correct. It is related to Garlic vine only. The photographs posted by … also look like Garlic vine, perhaps clicked during the lean season or at the end of the season. That is why we see few flowers.
I re-iterate that your article and pictures that it has, are indeed of garlic vine.Aspects of my posted plant do not match those of garlic vine in three respects at the least:1) leaves and branches of posted plant are not pendulous as seen in garlic vine,2) the leaf venation of posted plant matches to that of glow vine, and clearly different from that of garlic vine.
3) stem of posted plant is not lenticellate. Stems of garlic vine are clearly with lenticels.
Thanks … You have verified all the characters unlike me, really a well researched info.
your pictures of the glow vine show the leaves and the requisite diagnostic features of Saritaea magnifica.toptropicals pictures are of nice flowers but except for one of his pictures where i see a faint diagnostic criteria. i dont see anything that’s conclusive but he and his wife are ardent plant lovers so he must be doing good survey though his pictures dont show it in this case.
There is no doubt your garlic vine is it, though i would have loved to have seen the venation in its leaves and the tendrils.
final say would be for future. if anyone is photographing these vines/shrubs. that may be the garlic vine or not…just smell the flower or crush one leaf and small when i do something like that, i ask the owner/ guard etc. and if they are unwilling, i just rub the leaf and small. end of storyif you had garlic smell when you photographed the specimen. its garlic vine and its relatives in the Mansoa group.
next pay attention to the leaves, venation, both sides, climbing: tendrils. non climbing: if mature plant …will definitely: no tendrils
Say it with Flowers : 9 posts by 5 authors. Attachments (4)This particular Independence day brought happiness to me in real sense. Yesterday , on Independence Day first bunch of Wisteria chinensis bloom in my house and Passiflora which gives first flower on Diwali also started blooming yesterday onwards. I have taken he photo and post it soon.
Here are the shots of Whisteria chinensis.
I think the flowers in the posted pictures belong to Bignoniaceae (resembling Adenocalymma). Wisteria sinensis is a Fabaceae member.
yes sir…..I feel it as adenocalyma
I have Adenocalyma plant also in my house, which used to bloom from October to Jan,Now for some reasons it is not doing well.The difference in between these two plants character-the leaf structure, the colour and the smell.Only flower-shape and colours are the similar, but not the size and flowering season.
Besides that I have seen the flower in temperate region and grown it here in India International Centre, Delhi.
I find pictures of Wisteria chinensis on net totally different from your posted ones
Wait for next season. Hopefully more flowers will appear. Then it will be easier to identify.
Above plant should be Mansoa alliacea (Lam.) A.H. Gentry (syn: Adenocalymma alliacea (Lam.) Meirs; Pseudocalymma alliaceum (Lam.) Sandwith) if it has garlic smell when leaves are crushed or else Bignonia aequinoctialis L. (Cydista aequinoctialis (L.) Miers) if it lacks garlic smell
The two are often confused
Appears close to images at Bignonia magnifica (Cultivated)
Leaves of the climber may not be visible in the posted images.
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Bignonia magnifica from Lal Bagh Bangalore-02022022-1: 6 high res. images.
Bignonia magnifica photographed from Lal Bagh Bangalore, 29-9-2015.
The ID is correct.
.
References: