Ipomoea tricolor
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Ipomoea tricolor, the Mexican morning glory or just morning glory,<ref name=RHSAZ>Template:Cite book</ref> is a species of flowering plant in the family Convolvulaceae, native to the tropics of the Americas, and widely cultivated and naturalised elsewhere.
Alkaloids
Ipomoea tricolor seeds contains LSA and LSH among other alkaloids due to the presence of a symbiotic fungus Periglandula ipomoeae, which produces them.<ref>Steiner, Ulrike, and Eckhard Leistner. "Ergoline alkaloids in convolvulaceous host plants originate from epibiotic clavicipitaceous fungi of the genus Periglandula." Fungal Ecology 5.3 (2012): 316-321. Available at: [1]</ref>
Description
It is an herbaceous annual or perennial twining liana growing to Template:Convert tall. The leaves are spirally arranged, Template:Cvt long with a Template:Cvt long petiole. The flowers are trumpet-shaped, Template:Convert in diameter, most commonly blue with a white to golden yellow centre.
I. tricolor and many rarer species of morning glory, contain ergoline alkaloids, predominantly ergine. Some supermarkets have stopped carrying I. tricolor seeds because of this.
Cultivation and uses
In cultivation, the species is very commonly grown misnamed as Ipomoea violacea, which is actually a different, though related, species.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> I. tricolor does not tolerate temperatures below Template:Convert, and so in temperate regions is usually grown as an annual. It is in any case a relatively short-lived plant. It prefers a warm, sheltered, sunny position such as a south- or west-facing wall.
Ingesting any part of the plant may cause discomfort.<ref name = RHSPF/>
Numerous cultivars of I. tricolor with different flower colours have been selected for use as ornamental plants; widely grown examples include: Template:Div col
- ‘Blue Star’
- ‘Flying Saucers’
- ‘Heavenly Blue’
- ‘Heavenly Blue Improved’
- ‘Pearly Gates’
- ‘Rainbow Flash’
- ‘Skylark’
- ‘Summer Skies’
- ‘Wedding Bells’
The cultivar 'Heavenly Blue' has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.<ref name = RHSPF>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Weed control
Ipomoea tricolor has phytotoxic effects which inhibit seedling growth in weeds. In Mexico, farmers promote the growth of I. tricolor as a cover plant. It prevents weeds and unwanted plants from growing. When it is time to plant crops, this plant is incorporated into the soil. Although it is toxic to weeds, it does not affect crops such as sugarcane.<ref name=Anaya>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Chemical deterrent used to discourage ingestion
It is rumored that I. tricolor seeds are coated with a chemical that induces sickness so as to dissuade people from using them as a drug, but this is probably a rumor that stems from several factors:
- I. tricolor seeds, by themselves, induce sickness as a result of glycoresins<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and the very ergolines that are desired by users.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
- Such is done to other commonly available substances that can induce effects, specifically gas dusters and acetone (which have bitterant added) and denatured alcohol.
- Chemical coatings are added to garden seeds to prevent fungal growth (e.g. neonicotinoids, Thiram, and ApronMaxx®).
- Packets of I. tricolor seeds are known to have a warning that the seeds are toxic.
Methyl mercury type compounds have been specified in the rumors, but a 1964 article conveys that such compounds were only used in the past and that the majority "insecticide" at the time of publication was "quite an innocuous substance."<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> There's no evidence that the seeds are coated with a chemical deterrent.
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'Wedding Bells'
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'Wedding Bells' close-up
Colour change
In Ipomoea tricolor 'Heavenly Blue', the colour of the flower changes during blossom according to an increase in vacuolar pH.<ref name="YoshidaKawachi2005">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="YoshidaKondo1995">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="YoshidaMiki2009">Template:Cite journal</ref> This shift, from red to blue, is induced by chemical modifications affecting the anthocyanin molecules present in the petals.
References
External links
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