Difference between revisions of "Pueraria phaseoloides"

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(Created page with '{{SPlantbox |Min ht metric=cm |Temp Metric=°F |image=Upload.png |image_width=240 }} {{Inc| Pueraria phaseololdes, Benth. (Dolichos phaseoloildes, Roxbg.). St. twining, often sca…')
 
 
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|familia=Leguminosae
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|genus=Pueraria
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|species=phaseoloides
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|common_name=Tropical Kudzu
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|habit=vine-climber
 
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|lifespan=perennial
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|features=edible
 
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Describe the plant here...
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Roots are edible.
  
 
==Cultivation==
 
==Cultivation==
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Possible to grow as an annual crop, harvesting roots in the fall.
  
 
===Propagation===
 
===Propagation===

Latest revision as of 17:36, 1 December 2009


Upload.png


Plant Characteristics
Habit   vine-climber

Lifespan: perennial
Cultivation
Features: edible
Scientific Names

Leguminosae >

Pueraria >

phaseoloides >



Read about Pueraria phaseoloides in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture 

Pueraria phaseololdes, Benth. (Dolichos phaseoloildes, Roxbg.). St. twining, often scarcely woody, clothed with dense spreading brown hairs: stipules small, lanceolate: lfts. membranous, sparingly covered with appressed bristly hairs above, gray and densely matted below; terminal 1ft. roundish, broadly ovate or rhomboidal, entire or shallowly or deeply lobed, 3-6 in. long: fls. clustered on numerous long-peduncled racemes; pedicels very short; bracts and bractlets lanceolate, strongly nerved, more or less persistent; calyx 1/4-3/8in. long, densely clothed with appressed bristly hairs, lowest tooth lanceolate, as long as the tube, others shorter, all setaceous pointed: corolla reddish, twice as lcng as the calyx; standard roundish above, distinctly spurred: pod glabrescent, 3-4 in. long. India, China, Malaya.—Intro, into U. S. in 1911. Suitable as an ornamental in the southern states. P. L. Ricker.


The above text is from the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture. It may be out of date, but still contains valuable and interesting information which can be incorporated into the remainder of the article. Click on "Collapse" in the header to hide this text.


Roots are edible.

Cultivation

Possible to grow as an annual crop, harvesting roots in the fall.

Propagation

Pests and diseases

Species

Gallery

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References

External links