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Yellow Passion Vine, Little Passionflower

The hardiest of the passion flower vine, it maintains its foliage in mild winters through zone 8b. Prefers woodlands, forests, thickets, and maritime forests. Tendrils along the stem allow the vine to climb to 20 feet in height without damaging any trellises or structures.

Plant this vine in fertile, moist, well-drained soils in full sun to partial shade. To encourage robust root growth and ensure its return the following spring plants should be added to the ground as early in the growing season as possible.

The bright green leaves are wider than they are long and softly lobed in three parts. The flowers are small, about 1 inch or less across, pale greenish-yellow to off-white, blooming in late summer to fall. The flowers are followed by small black berries that that are eaten by birds and mammals.

This vine is an important wildlife plant, attracting bees, butterflies, birds, and mammals while being resistant to damage by deer. It is happy in a container, will grow on a trellis or fence or sprawl on the ground, and is at home in a butterfly or pollinator garden. In cold areas, containers may need to be brought indoors over the winter. This climbing or trailing vine grows to about 15 ft. in length. The greenish-yellow flowers, an inch across, give way to purple or black berries. Wide, shallowly lobed leaves with entire margins turn an attractive yellow in fall.

Photo by Fritzflohrreynolds via Wikimedia Commons

Larval Host for the

12-15'

12-15'

SIZE

SOIL

Rocky, Moist

LIGHT

Part Shade

BENEFITS

Butterfiles, Monarch Butterfly, Bees, Birds, Small Mammals

NOTES

The pollen of this species is the only known larval foodstuff of the Passionflower Bee.

CHARACTERISTICS

Showy, Low Maintenance, Drought Tolerant

May, June, July, August, September

Vine

This 

flowers in

Yellow Passionflower

Passiflora lutea

DETAIL VIEW

DESCRIPTION

The hardiest of the passion flower vine, it maintains its foliage in mild winters through zone 8b. Prefers woodlands, forests, thickets, and maritime forests. Tendrils along the stem allow the vine to climb to 20 feet in height without damaging any trellises or structures.

Plant this vine in fertile, moist, well-drained soils in full sun to partial shade. To encourage robust root growth and ensure its return the following spring plants should be added to the ground as early in the growing season as possible.

The bright green leaves are wider than they are long and softly lobed in three parts. The flowers are small, about 1 inch or less across, pale greenish-yellow to off-white, blooming in late summer to fall. The flowers are followed by small black berries that that are eaten by birds and mammals.

This vine is an important wildlife plant, attracting bees, butterflies, birds, and mammals while being resistant to damage by deer. It is happy in a container, will grow on a trellis or fence or sprawl on the ground, and is at home in a butterfly or pollinator garden. In cold areas, containers may need to be brought indoors over the winter. This climbing or trailing vine grows to about 15 ft. in length. The greenish-yellow flowers, an inch across, give way to purple or black berries. Wide, shallowly lobed leaves with entire margins turn an attractive yellow in fall.

Photo by Fritzflohrreynolds via Wikimedia Commons
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