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581 bytes added ,  17:46, 23 March 2010
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{{SPlantbox
 
{{SPlantbox
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|familia=Convolvulaceae
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|genus=Ipomoea
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|species=leptophylla
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|taxo_author=Torr.
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|common_name=Bush Morning Glory, Bush Moonflower
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|habit=vine-climber
 
|Temp Metric=°F
 
|Temp Metric=°F
 
|jumpin=If this plant info box on watering; zones; height; etc. is mostly empty you can click on the edit tab and fill in the blanks!
 
|jumpin=If this plant info box on watering; zones; height; etc. is mostly empty you can click on the edit tab and fill in the blanks!
|image=Upload.png
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|image=Ipomoealeptophylla.jpg
 
|image_width=240
 
|image_width=240
 
}}
 
}}
Describe the plant here...
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'''''Ipomoea leptophylla''''', the '''Bush Morning Glory''' or '''Bush Moonflower''', is a [[flowering plant]] [[species]] in the [[bindweed]] [[family (biology)|family]], [[Convolvulaceae]].  
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It belongs to the [[morning glory]] [[genus]] ''[[Ipomoea]]'' and is native to the warm-[[temperate]] regions of western [[North America]]. A vernacular local name is '''"[[manroot]]"''', which otherwise usually refers to the [[gourd]] genus ''Marah''.
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{{Inc|
 
{{Inc|
 
Ipomoea leptophylla, Torr. Bush Moonfloweb. St. 2-5 ft. high, with many slender, recurving branches: lvs. 2-4 in. long, entire: peduncle stout, 1-4-fld., usually shorter than the lvs.; corolla about 3 in. across, funnel- form, rose-pink, deepening to purple in the throat. Aug.-Oct. Dry plains, Neb. and Wyo., south to Texas and N. Mex. Plant World 7:5, 6.—This and the preceding species are adapted for very dry places because of the enormous tuberous rootstocks, which often weigh 100 pounds and extend into the subsoil for 4 ft. They sometimes thrive where no rain has fallen for 1-3 years. The plant is beautiful when in flower.
 
Ipomoea leptophylla, Torr. Bush Moonfloweb. St. 2-5 ft. high, with many slender, recurving branches: lvs. 2-4 in. long, entire: peduncle stout, 1-4-fld., usually shorter than the lvs.; corolla about 3 in. across, funnel- form, rose-pink, deepening to purple in the throat. Aug.-Oct. Dry plains, Neb. and Wyo., south to Texas and N. Mex. Plant World 7:5, 6.—This and the preceding species are adapted for very dry places because of the enormous tuberous rootstocks, which often weigh 100 pounds and extend into the subsoil for 4 ft. They sometimes thrive where no rain has fallen for 1-3 years. The plant is beautiful when in flower.