Iniciar Sesión Nueva Cuenta Mapa del Sitio
  • Inicio
  • Proyectos de Flora
    • Baja California
    • Baja California Sur
    • Chihuahua
    • Durango
    • Sinaloa
    • Sonora
    • Proyecto MABA
  • Herramientas de Búsqueda
    • Colecciones
    • Mapa
    • Browse Images
    • Listados Dinámicos
    • Claves dinámicas
  • Herbarios Participantes
    • BCMEX (Baja California)
    • HCIAD (Sinaloa)
    • HCIB (Baja California Sur)
    • CIIDIR (Durango)
    • USON (Sonora)
Plumbago zeylanica L.   (redirigido desde: Plumbago scandens L.)
Familia: Plumbaginaceae
esplúmbago, more...plúmbago, estrenina, canutillo, pegajoso, h. del alacrán, h. del pescado, hierba del alacrán (en: doctorbush, Wild Leadwort, leadwort, plumbago)
[Plumbago scandens L.]
Plumbago zeylanica image
Anthony Mendoza
  • FNA
  • SW Field Guide
  • Recursos
Alan R. Smith in Flora of North America (vol. 5)
Plants herbaceous. Stems prost-rate, climbing, or erect, glabrous. Leaves petiolate (to 1.5 cm) or sessile; blade ovate, lance-elliptic, or spatulate to oblanceolate, (3-)5-9(-15) × (1-)2.5-4(-7) cm, base attenuate, apex acute, acuminate, or obtuse. Inflorescences 3-15(-30) cm, rachises glandular, viscid; floral bracts lanceolate, 3-7 × 1-2 mm. Flowers heterostylous; calyx 7-11(-13) mm, tube glabrous but with stalked glands along length of ribs; corolla white, 17-33 mm, tube 12.5-28 mm (less than 2 times length of calyx), lobes 5-12 × 3-3.5 mm; stamens included. Capsules 7.5-8 mm. Seeds reddish brown to dark brown, 5-6 mm. Flowering year-round. Palm groves, thickets, shady hummocks, shell mounds, rocky places in open areas; 0-50 m; Ariz., Fla., Tex.; Mexico; Central America; South America; Asia; Africa; Pacific Islands. Plumbago zeylanica and P. scandens, both Linnaean species, have heretofore been treated as distinct, the former name applied exclusively to Old World plants, the latter to New World specimens. John Edmondson (pers. comm.) indicates that he believes this 'could be a classic case of New World and Old World taxonomists each doing their own thing.' Plants in herbaria under these two names appear indistinguishable.

Kearney and Peebles 1969, Shreve and Wiggins 1964
Duration: Perennial Nativity: Non-Native Lifeform: Vine General: Suffrutescent perennials, decumbent to scandent, straggly, with slender weak stems to 3 m long, glabrous except for the inflorescence. Leaves: Alternate, elliptic, lance-elliptic, oblong, or ovate, acute or acuminate, margins entire. Flowers: White or blue-tinged, perfect, regular, 5-merous, salverform with a long, slender tube, sessile or subsessile, borne in panicles of spikelike racemes, calyx tubular with 5 green nerves and dotted with stipitate glands, stamens 5, free from the corolla, anthers barely exserted, single style. Fruits: Fruit an ovoid, slender, 1-seeded capsule. Ecology: Found in canyons, shaded hillsides, along roads, fences, and stone walls, from 2,500-4,000 ft (762-1219 m); flowering May-September. Notes: Look for this species under Plumbago scandens. Ethnobotany: Used for swollen parts of the body and also applied to sores. Etymology: Plumbago is a Latin name derived from plumbum for lead, and ago, which is a common plant name indicating a resemblance, while zeylanica means of or from Ceylon (Sri Lanka). Synonyms: Plumbago scandens Editor: LCrumbacher, 2011
Plumbago zeylanica
Abrir Mapa Interactivo
Plumbago zeylanica image
Anthony Mendoza
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Anthony Mendoza
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Anthony Mendoza
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Stephen Hale
Plumbago zeylanica image
Stephen Hale
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Patrick Alexander
Plumbago zeylanica image
Patrick Alexander
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Sue Carnahan
Plumbago zeylanica image
Zachery Berry
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Kathy M. Davis, University of Florida Herbarium
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
R. Wayne Van Devender
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Plumbago zeylanica image
Hacer Clic para Desplegar
100 Imágenes Iniciales
- - - - -
Ver Todas las Imágenes
Este sitio es resultado de la colaboración entre los herbarios del noroeste de México y El Consorcio de SEINet. Está administrado por el Herbario de la Universidad de Sonora