Stinking passionflower, Bush passion fruit, Wild water lemon

Passiflora foetida (common names: stinking passionflowerwild maracujabush passion fruitwild water lemon, stone flower, love-in-a-mist, or running pop) is a species of passion flower that is native to the southwestern United States (southern Texas and Arizona), Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America, and much of South America. It has been introduced to tropical regions around the world, such as Southeast Asia, South Asia, Hawaii, Africa, and The Maldives. It is a creeping vine-like other member of the genus and yields edible fruit. The specific epithet, foetida, means “stinking” in Latin and refers to the strong aroma emitted by damaged foliage.[rx]

This passion flower tolerates arid ground but favors moist areas. It is known to be an invasive species in some areas.[rx] This plant is also a widely grown perennial climber and has been used in traditional medicine.[rx]

Bush Passion Fruit Quick Facts
Name: Bush Passion Fruit
Scientific Name: Passiflora foetida
Origin Southern USA (i.e. Texas and southern Arizona), Mexico, Central America (i.e. Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama), the Caribbean and South America
Colors Green when young turning to yellow or orange to red
Shapes Oval, 2-3 cm diameter, smooth, partially enclosed by the persistent, deeply-divided, sticky floral bracts
Flesh colors Bluish-white
Taste Mildly sweet and delicately flavored
Health benefits Maintain healthy bones, Prevent Anemia, Prevent Cancer, Control blood pressure, Maintain healthy gums and teeth, overcome the Kidney Disorder

Passiflora foetida commonly known as wild maracuja, bush passion fruit, love-in-a-mist, or running pop is a species of passionflower belonging to Passifloraceae (Passion-flower family). The plant is native to the southwestern United States (southern Texas and Arizona), Mexico, the Caribbean, Central America, and much of South America. It has been introduced to tropical regions around the world, such as Southeast Asia, South Asia, and Hawaii. It is a creeping vine-like other member of the genus and yields edible fruit. It is a popular plant with many names including running pop, Stinking passionflower, fetid passionflower, scarlet fruit passionflower, Galapagos passionflower, Love–in-the-mist, Scarletfruit passionflower, Fetid passionflower, red-fruit passionflower, running-pop, wild water-lemon, Love-in-a-mist passionflower, Mossy passionflower, and many more.

Bush passion Fruit facts

Name Bush Passion Fruit
Scientific Name Passiflora foetida
Native Southern USA (i.e. Texas and southern Arizona), Mexico, Central America (i.e. Belize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Panama), the Caribbean and South America (i.e. French Guiana, Guyana, Surinam, Venezuela, Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Argentina, Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay).  It has also been widely naturalized in other tropical regions of the world including south-eastern Asia
Common Names Running pop, Stinking passionflower, fetid passionflower, scarletfruit passionflower, Galapagos passionflower, Love–in-the-mist, Scarletfruit passionflower, Fetid passionflower, red-fruit passionflower, running-pop, wild water-lemon, Love-in-a-mist passionflower, Mossy passionflower, Stinking granadilla, Stinking passionfruit, fit-weed, wild passionfruit, passionflower, pop vine, red fruit passionflower, stinking passion vine, stinking passionflower, wild passionfruit
Name in Other Languages Assamese: Junuka phul, Lota bel, Koth bel, Koth-bel, Junuka-lata, Kotal-bel, Mewa
Azerbaijani: Pisiyli qonaqotu
Argentina: Ataco, corona de Cristo, granadilla, mburucuyá, mburucuyá aceitosa, mburucuyá menor, mburucuyá miní, mburucuyá rastrero, pasionaria, pasionaria hedionda, pocoto
Australia: Mossy passion flower
Bengali: Jhumka Lota (ঝুমকোলতা)
Bolivia: Pedón
Brazil: Maracajusinho (San Luis Island), maracujá catinga, maracujá de cheiro, maracujá de cobra, maracujá de estalo, maracujá de lagartinho, maracujá fedorento, maracuja-da-petra
Cambodia: Sav mao prey
Chamorro: Dulce, kinahulo‘ atdao
Chinese: Long zhu guo (龙珠果),Ye xian guo, Long zhu cao, Long yan guo, Tian xian guo
Colombia: Bejuco canastilla, chulupa de loma, cinco Ilagas,  cocorilla, curubo, flor de la passion, gulupo
Chuukese: Bombom
Dominican Republic: Caguazo, mariballa
Ecuador: Love in a mist
El Salvador: Granadilla colorado, granadilla montes, sandia de culebra
English: Running pop, Stinking passionflower, fetid passionflower, scarletfruit passionflower, Galapagos passionflower, Love–in-the-mist, Scarletfruit passionflower, Fetid passionflower, red-fruit passionflower, running-pop, wild water-lemon, Love-in-a-mist passionflower, Mossy passionflower, Stinking granadilla, Stinking passionfruit, fit-weed, wild passionfruit
Fijian: Loliloli ni kalavo, poniu, qaranidila, sou, vaini, wild passion fruit
French: Marie goujeat, Marie-Gougeat, passiflore, passiflore fétide, petite grenadille, poc-poc, poc-poc sauvage, toque molle
German: Übelriechende Passionsblume, Galapagos-Passionsblume, Rotfrüchtige Passionsblume, Stinkende Grenadille
Guadeloupe: Magouja, mariegougeat
Guam: Kinahulo atadeo
Guyana: Mis-mis, Semito, Simatoo
Haitian:  Marigouya, bonbon koulèv, toque molle
Hawaiian: Lani wai, pohāpohā
Hebrew: שעונית מבאישה
Honduras: Granadilla
I-Kiribati: Te biku
India: Banchathail, mukkopeera, jhumka lata (झुमका लता)
Indonesian: Rambusa prefer, Ciplukan rambat, buah tikus, ceplukan blunsun, katceprek, katjeprek, lemanas, permot, permot rajutan, rambaton blunsun
Irula: Varingkodi – Ir
Japanese: Kusa-tokeiso (クサトケイソウ)
Jamaica: Granadilla, love in a mist, sweet cup
Javanese: Jembut landa
Kannada: Kukkiballi
Kwaraae: Kakalifaka, kwalo kakali
Madagascar: Tsipopoka
Malay: Letup-letup, Gegambo
Malayalam: Poochapalam, am’mūm’mappaḻaṁ (അമ്മൂമ്മപ്പഴം), Chirranchantiya
Malaysia: Pokok lang bulu, timun dendang
Manipuri: Lam radhikanachom (লম রাধিকানাচোম)
Marathi: Vel-ghani (वेल घाणी)
Mauritius: Poc-poc sauvage
Mexico: Clavellín blanco, granadilla, jujito peludo, jujo
MicronesiaFederated states of: Pwompwomw (Pohnpei)
Myanmar: Suka, taw-suka-ban
Nauruan: Oatamo, watamo
Netherlands: Marie-goujeat
Nicaragua: Catapanza
Niuean: Vine vao
Palauan: Kudamono
Paraguay: Hóntayek, mburucuyá
Persian: لیمو آب وحشی
Peru: Bolsa mullaca,  granadilla, granadilla cimarrona, puru-puru
Philippines: Kurunggut, lupok-lupok, masaflora, melon meleonan, pasionariang-mabaho, prutas taungan
Pohnpeian: Pompom, pwompwomw, pwomwpwomp
Portuguese: Maraca jusinho, Maracuja catinga, Maracuja de cobra, Maracuja fedorento
Puerto Rico: Flor de pasion sylvestre, Silvestre, tagua tagua
Réunion: Petite grenadille, poc poc
Russian: Strastotsvet vonyuchiy (Страстоцвет вонючий), passiflora izmenchivaya  (пассифлора изменчивая), strastotsvet vonyuchiy (страстоцвет вонючий), strastotsvet izmenchivyy (страстоцвет изменчивый)
Samoan: Pāsio vao, tapatapao
Singapore: Timun dendang, timun hutan, timun padang
Solomon Islands: Kakalifaka, kwalo kakali
South Africa: Running pop
Spanish: Bedoca, bejuco canastilla, bembillo, catapanza, cinco-llagas, granadilla, granadilla cimarrona, granadilla colorado, granadilla de culebra, granadilla montes, granadilla silvestre, injito colorado, parchita, pasiflora hedionda, pasionara hedionda, pedón, sandia de culebra, sandia de ratón, simito, vedoca, tumbillo, norbo cimarrón, caguajasa, clavellin blanco
Sri Lanka: Dalbattu, kodimathulai, madahalu, udahalu
Surinam: Snekimarkoesa
Tamil: Kāṭṭuk koṭittōṭai (காட்டுக் கொடித்தோடை), Mosukkattan, Poonaipiduku, Siruppunaikkali, Chiru punai-k-kali, Mupparisavalli
Telugu: Tellajumiki
Thai: Ka-thok-rok (กะทกรก)
Tongan: Vaine ‘ae kumā, vaine ‘initia
USA/Hawaii: Scarlet fruited passion flower
Venezuela: Cojón de gato, parchita de culebra, parchita de montana
Vietnamese: Lạc tiên, chum bao
Yapese: Tumatis, tutumis
Plant Growth Habit Ill-scented, branched, climbing herbaceous annual or perennial plant
Growing Climates Common on seashores, river banks, bushland, highway borders, wastelands, disturbed areas, along roadsides, in coastal thickets, patches of forest, canefields, crops, plantations, forest edges/gaps, savannahs, riparian zones, watercourses (i.e. riparian habitats), closed forests, coastal environs in tropical and sub-tropical regions,  greenhouses and facultative upland
Soil Grows on a wide range of soils from peats through loams to sands, as well as on soils derived from corals and volcanic debris
Plant Size 1.5 to 6 m tall
Root An annual or perennial woody tap root
Stem 1-5 m long, cylindrical, branched, herbaceous, round and green. They are thin and wiry, covered with minute sticky yellow hairs. Older stems become woody
Leaf Single, alternate, stipules to 1 cm long and divided into hair-like segments, petiole 2-10 cm long without nectary glands, blades 5-15 cm long, 3 or 5 lobed, the base cordate, the edges generally fringed with glandular hairs, the veins prominent, pale green and often finely hairy. It produces a pungent smell on crushing
Tendrils Leaf-opposed, unbranched, coiling and grasping
Flowering season July to September
Flower Solitary in upper leaf axils, peduncle 3-5 cm long, bracts 2-4 cm long and deeply divided into hair-like segments that surround the flower and fruit, sepals 5, greenish petals 5, blunt, white to pale purple or pinkish, 3-5 cm across surrounding a 2-rowed corona of purplish filaments
Fruit Shape & Size Oval, 2-3 cm diameter, smooth, partially enclosed by the persistent, deeply-divided, sticky floral bracts
Fruit Color Green when young turning to yellow or orange to red, sometimes spotted, even pale green
Flesh Color Bluish-white
Seed Blackish, flattened, wedge-shaped, 3-4 mm long, irregularly ridged, surrounded by a transparent aril
Propagation By seed
Taste Mildly sweet and delicately flavored
Plant Parts Used Whole plant, leaves, fruits, flower
Season By seed
Health Benefits
  • Maintain healthy bones
  • Prevent Anemia
  • Prevent Cancer
  • Control blood pressure
  • Maintain healthy gums and teeth
  • Overcome the Kidney Disorder
Culinary Uses
  • Fruits are used to make refreshments in Venezuela.
  • Row fruits (both seeds and arils) and the young cooked leaves are eaten in Thailand.
  • Young leaves are used in Surinam and Java as a vegetable.
Precautions
  • P. foetida leaves contain cyanide, which if consumed by goats, mainly during the dry season, result in poisoning with symptoms such as apathy, tachycardia, tachypnea, jugular venous pulse, incoordination, bellowing, mydriasis, and sternal recumbence followed by lateral recumbence.
  • The unripe fruits contain cyanide and are poisonous.

 

Bush Passion Fruit Scientific Classification

Scientific Name: Passiflora foetida

Rank Scientific Name & (Common Name)
Kingdom Plantae (Plants)
Subkingdom Tracheobionta (Vascular plants)
Infrakingdom Streptophyta  (land plants)
Superdivision Streptophyta  (land plants)
Division Magnoliophyta (Flowering plants)
Subdivision Spermatophytina  (spermatophytes, seed plants, phanérogames)
Class Magnoliopsida (Dicotyledons)
Subclass Dilleniidae
Superorder Rosanae
Order Violales
Family Passifloraceae (Passion-flower family)
Genus Passiflora L. (passionflower)
Species Passiflora foetida L. (fetid passionflower)
Synonyms
  • Decaloba obscura (Lindl.) M.Roem
  • Dysosmia ciliata M.Roem
  • Dysosmia foetida (L.) M.Roem
  • Dysosmia gossypiifolia M.Roem
  • Dysosmia hastata M.Roem
  • Dysosmia hibiscifolia M.Roem
  • Dysosmia hircina Sweet ex M. Roem
  • Dysosmia nigelliflora M.Roem
  • Dysosmia polyadena M.Roem
  • Granadilla foetida (L.) Gaertn
  • Passiflora balansae Chodat
  • Passiflora baraquiniana Lem
  • Passiflora foetida var. balansae Chodat
  • Passiflora foetida var. galapagensis Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. gardneri Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. glabrifolia Miq. ex Triana & Planch
  • Passiflora foetida var. hastata (Bertol.) Mast
  • Passiflora foetida var. hirsuta (L.) Mast
  • Passiflora foetida var. hirsutissima Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. isthmia Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. lanuginosa Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. maxonii Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. mayarum Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. nigelliflora (Hook.) Mast
  • Passiflora foetida var. salvadorensis Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. sericea Chodat & Hassl
  • Passiflora foetida var. subpalmata Killip
  • Passiflora foetida var. variegata G. Mey
  • Passiflora hastata Bertol
  • Passiflora hibiscifolia var. velutina Fenzl ex Jacq
  • Passiflora hirsuta Lodd
  • Passiflora liebmannii Mast
  • Passiflora marigouja Perr. ex Triana & Planch
  • Passiflora muralis Barb. Rodr
  • Passiflora nigelliflora Hook
  • Passiflora polyadena Vell
  • Passiflora pseudociliata Britton
  • Passiflora variegata Mill
  • Passiflora vesicaria L
  • Tripsilina foetida (L.) Raf

The name of the genus is the combination of the Latin terms “passio, -onis” which means passion, and “flows, -oris” which means flower with reference to the structure of the flower where the first Spanish missionaries did see the instruments of the Passion of Christ. The specific epithet, foetida, means “stinking” in Latin and refers to the strong aroma emitted by damaged foliage. Passiflora foetida is able to trap insects on its bracts, which exude a sticky substance that also contains digestive enzymes. This minimizes predation on young flowers and fruits. Whether or not it gains nourishment from its prey is uncertain, and it is currently considered a proto-carnivorous plant.

Plant Description

Bush Passion Fruit is an ill-scented, branched, climbing herbaceous annual or perennial plant that grows about 1.5 to 6 m tall. The plant is found growing in seashores, riverbanks, bushland, highway borders, wastelands, disturbed areas, along roadsides, in coastal thickets, patches of forest, cane fields, crops, plantations, forest edges/gaps, savannahs, riparian zones, watercourses (i.e. riparian habitats), closed forests, coastal environs in tropical and sub-tropical regions, greenhouses and facultative upland.  The plant can grow on a wide range of soils from peats through loams to sands, as well as on soils derived from corals and volcanic debris. The plant has annual or perennial woody taproots. This plant is also a widely grown perennial climber and has been used in traditional medicine.

Stem

The stems grow 1.5 to 6 m in height. It appears cylindrical in shape, thin, wiry, and woody, covered with sticky yellow hairs on a total surface. They give off an unpleasant odor when crushed stems and leaves are suspected of poisoning livestock.

Leaves

Leaves most often have three rounded or pointed lobes, but sometimes they can be entire or five-lobed. These leaves are 3-10.5 cm long and 3-10 cm wide and are alternately arranged along the stems and borne on stalks 1-6 cm long. They are hairy on both surfaces, with the hairs along their margins often being sticky. At the base of each leaf stalk, there is a tendril and a 1 cm long threadlike appendage (i.e. stipule) covered in sticky glands. It produces a pungent smell on crushing.

 Flower

Flowers are 3-5 cm across vary from pinkish to white or purplish in color and are borne singly in the leaf forks on stalks 2-4.5 cm long. They are surrounded by three deeply-divided bracts 2-4 cm long that are densely covered in large sticky hairs. Each flower has five sepals 1-2 cm long and five petals 1-2 cm long. They also have five stamens, with anthers 4-5 mm long, and an ovary topped with three styles tipped with prominent stigmas. Flowering occurs mainly during autumn, winter, and spring (i.e. from February to November). It flowers all year round, opening to the morning and closing before noon.

Fruit

Fertile flowers are followed by smooth globose berries that are 2-3 cm diameter partially enclosed by the persistent, deeply-divided, sticky bracts. Fruits are kumquat-sized and contain a bluish-white pulp that is mildly sweet and delicately flavored. These fruits are somewhat hairy and turn from green to yellow or orange in color as they mature. Fruits are eaten by birds, who disperse the seeds.

Young fruit is cyanogenic and also eaten by Villagers. The bracts of this plant serve as insect traps, which exude a sticky substance that also contains digestive enzymes. This minimizes predation on young flowers and fruits, but it is as yet unknown whether the plant digests and gains nourishment from the trapped insects or if it merely uses the bracts as a defensive mechanism to protect its flowers and fruit. This is still an issue of debate, and it is considered a proto-carnivorous plant.

Seeds

Seeds of the Passiflora genus vary greatly in size and shape. However, several common features are apparent, including hard seed coats surrounding a white, well-developed, straight embryo, with large flat cotyledons. The thin layer of ruminated endosperm surrounds the embryo. Seeds are flat, black, woody, and enclosed in sweet to an aromatic pulp. The outer integument is 3-layered in Passiflora, but the inner is 3-layered in both. Seeds are covered with a succulent colored aril which originates as a small outgrowth around the funiculus at the organized embryo sack stage. The seed coat is formed by both the integuments is 6-layered in P. caerulea and P. edulis.

Health benefits of Bush Passion Fruit

Some of the benefits of the stinking passion fruit are listed below:

1. Maintain healthy bones

Stinking passion fruit consists of a high content of calcium that is useful for maintaining healthy bones. Healthy bones are useful for maintaining bone density so as to avoid the risk of the exposed to osteoporosis. Stinking passionflower is called the fruit to cure the bone because it can nourish your bones.

2. Prevent Anemia

Stinking passion fruit consists of a good amount of iron that helps to produce red blood cells so as to prevent and overcome disease anemia.

3. Prevent Cancer

Stinking passion fruit has antioxidant substances consisting of vitamin C, flavonoids, and also potassium. The contents have the ability to counteract the effects of free radicals, such as the growth of cancer cells, as well as damaging skin tissue.

4. Controlling your blood pressure

The stinking passion fruit is very nice and helpful for the health of the body because it can control blood pressure in order to remain stable.

5. Maintaining healthy gums and teeth

The stinking passion fruit is not only beneficial for the health of your bones. However, the content of calcium in the fruit is also able to maintain the health of your gums and teeth.

6. Can overcome the Kidney Disorder

Mineral content in the fruit is also able to help kidney function in the process of excretion of urine.

Traditional uses and benefits of Bush Passion Fruit

  • Leaves are used to treat asthma and hysteria.
  • It is a medicinal plant used to treat diseases affecting women in Costa Rica.
  • Leaves are used in baths for skin affections.
  • Roots have antispasmodic properties and the flowers have beneficial effects for breast illnesses.
  • The dry leaf is used as a tea in Vietnamese folk medicine to relieve sleeping problems, as well as treatment for itching and coughs.
  • The fresh, whole plant is boiled and the liquid is used as a children’s anthelmintic, for intestinal nematodes and flatworms.                                                                     Decoction of the dried plant is drunk to treat colds and chest coughs.
  • It is also used in the treatment of tuberculosis, worms, and coughs, and colds.
  • Fluid, pressed from the leaves and stem, is used to improve fertility in women.
  • The root is antispasmodic.
  • Leaves are crushed in water and the solution drunk as an antidote to the bite of the Papuan Black Snake.
  • Leaves, combined with those of Erythrina variegata, are mashed and their juice extracted then drunk in order to induce sleep or to treat sleeping disorders.
  • An infusion of the leaves is used for healing wounds.
  • Fresh young leaves are mashed and then rubbed onto the wound of a snake bite.
  • The leaf contains substances that have possible antimicrobial activity.
  • Plants are used for itchy conditions.
  • Decoction of fruit is used for asthma and biliousness.
  • Decoction of leaves and roots is used as an emmenagogue.
  • Fruit is used as an emetic.
  • Leaves are applied to the head for headaches and giddiness.
  • In India, traditionally used for diarrhea, throat and ear infections, liver disorders, tumors, itches, fever, and skin diseases, and for wound dressing.
  • It is used for the treatment of asthma in Malaysia.
  • It is used to treat epilepsy in Argentina.
  • It is used for gas, colds, and pregnancy to keep the baby active in Africa.
  • Decoction of leaf and bark mixed with the same of Annona glabra as anthelmintic for flatworms and nematodes in French Guiana.
  • Decoction of fresh whole plant drunk as children’s anthelmintic, for intestinal nematodes and flatworms.
  • Decoction of dried plant used for colds and chest colds.
  • It is used for the treatment of tuberculosis, worms, coughs, and colds in NW Guyana.
  • It is used as lotion or poultice for erysipelas and skin diseases with inflammation in Brazil.
  • Leaves of the plant are utilized as a folk medicine for the treatment of anti-anxiety, stress, and insomnia.
  • Hysteria can be cured by the consumption of leaves and root decoction of P. foetida.
  • Foetida is used as or poultices for erysipelas and skin diseases with inflammation in countries like Brazil.
  • This species can be helpful in treating digestive problems, including dyspepsia and diarrhea; alternatively, it is used as an astringent and expectorant for nervous conditions and spasms.
  • It is used in the treatment of itchy skin conditions such as scabies and tinea.
  • Leaves are crushed and soaked in water to make a liquid application to relieve the itch.
  • Rough sandpaper-like dry leaves are rubbed on the skin for tineaform skin infections such as ringworm.
  • Leaf paste of Passiflora foetida is applied for headaches and to treat skin diseases.
  • In Brazil, they are used in the form of lotions against skin diseases.

Other Facts

  • In parts of Malaysia, it is a serious weed of maize and rubber.
  • It also impacts negatively on coconut production in the Pacific; on maize, sugarcane, and cotton in Thailand; on oil palm in Indonesia; on taro in Samoa; and on various other crops in Sarawak.
  • Common diseases in chickens are treated with different preparations of the fruits, leaves, stem, and seeds, given orally or topically, in Ogun State, Nigeria.
  • The plant is used as a ground cover and as a hedge.

Prevention and Control

Due to the variable regulations around (de)registration of pesticides, your national list of registered pesticides or relevant authorities should be consulted to determine which products are legally allowed for use in your country when considering chemical control. Pesticides should always be used in a lawful manner, consistent with the product’s label.

Cultural Control

P. foetida may best be controlled by uprooting, either directly, or during inter-row cultivation and interplant hoeing. It cannot be smothered out, since it tolerates low light intensities and also tends to climb over taller plants. Good field hygiene is important in minimizing the spread and proliferation of the weed; plants should be controlled by whatever means available before they flower and set seeds. Composting material should be free of dormant weed seeds.

Grazing is unlikely to be effective due to the objectionable smell (and no doubt taste) of bruised foliage.

Chemical Control

Chemical control is only worthwhile in graminaceous crops such as sugarcane or improved pastures, or where the herbicide can be directed away from crop foliage since foliar application to broad-leaved crops would damage them. Henty and Pritchard (1975) and Kostermans et al. (1987) report that picloram, asulam, and ametrine may give shoot kill only in sugarcane in Queensland, Australia and that amitrole can be used as a directed spray in rubber. Webb and Feez (1987) report that fluroxypyr gives excellent selective control of P. foetida in both sugarcane and sorghum.

Biological Control

No attempts have been made at the biological control of P. foetida in the field. Some work has been conducted, however, to establish the potential for biological control of the Passifloraceae. Gardner showed that a number of weedy Passiflora spp. were vulnerable to vascular wilt caused by Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. Passiflora while the cultivated species P. edulis f. flavicarpa was not. Waage et al. (1981) examined the host ranges of a number of Heliconius butterflies with a view to their potential for biological control. Chavez et al. (1999) successfully transmitted viral pathogens of Passiflora edulis to P. foetida by grafting, mechanical inoculation, and the aphid Aphis gossypii and the chrysomelid beetles Diabrotica sp., Cerotoma sp. and Colaspis sp. However, aphid resistance in the field seems high due to the sticky hairs, as well as against other insects less than 2 mm.

References

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