Passiflora Species, Passion Vine, Wild Yellow Passion Flower

Passifloralutea

Family
Passifloraceae (pas-ih-flor-AY-see-ee)
Genus
Passiflora (pass-iff-FLOR-uh)
Species
lutea (LOO-tee-uh)
Synonym
Passiflora lutea var. glabriflora
Sun Exposure
Full Sun
Sun to Partial Shade
Foliage
Herbaceous
Height
6-8 ft. (1.8-2.4 m)
Spacing
18-24 in. (45-60 cm)
Hardiness
USDA Zone 7b: to -14.9 °C (5 °F)
USDA Zone 8a: to -12.2 °C (10 °F)
USDA Zone 8b: to -9.4 °C (15 °F)
USDA Zone 9a: to -6.6 °C (20 °F)
USDA Zone 9b: to -3.8 °C (25 °F)
USDA Zone 10a: to -1.1 °C (30 °F)
USDA Zone 10b: to 1.7 °C (35 °F)
USDA Zone 11: above 4.5 °C (40 °F)
Danger
Parts of plant are poisonous if ingested
Bloom Color
Green
Pale Green
Inconspicuous/none
Bloom Time
Mid Summer
Late Summer/Early Fall
Other Details
Category
Vines and Climbers
Water Requirements
Foliage Color
Where to Grow
Bloom Characteristics
This plant is attractive to bees, butterflies and/or birds
Bloom Size
Other details
Soil pH requirements
6.1 to 6.5 (mildly acidic)
6.6 to 7.5 (neutral)
Patent Information
Non-patented
Propagation Methods
From seed; direct sow outdoors in fall
Seed Collecting
Allow unblemished fruit to ripen; clean and dry seeds
Unblemished fruit must be significantly overripe before harvesting seed; clean and dry seeds
Regional

This plant is said to grow outdoors in the following regions:

Cullman, Alabama

Gadsden, Alabama

Blytheville, Arkansas

Evening Shade, Arkansas

Bartow, Florida

Ellenton, Florida

Melbourne, Florida

Orlando, Florida

Plant City, Florida

Sebastian, Florida

Sebring, Florida

Seffner, Florida

Tallahassee, Florida

Trenton, Florida

Atlanta, Georgia

Louisville, Kentucky

Richmond, Kentucky

Lonaconing, Maryland

Cambridge, Massachusetts

Eupora, Mississippi

Rochester, New York

Dudley, North Carolina

Durham, North Carolina

Elizabeth City, North Carolina

Greensboro, North Carolina

Manteo, North Carolina

Raleigh, North Carolina(2 reports)

Salter Path, North Carolina

Smithfield, North Carolina

Statesville, North Carolina

Pocola, Oklahoma

Charleston, South Carolina

Edisto Island, South Carolina

Greenville, South Carolina

Myrtle Beach, South Carolina

Kingsport, Tennessee

Memphis, Tennessee

Pocahontas, Tennessee

New Braunfels, Texas

San Antonio, Texas

Willis, Texas

show all

Featured Videos

Gardener's Notes:

9
positives
5
neutrals
1
negative
Sort By:
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G
Lexington, KY | July 2016 | positive

We live on a hill above a lake in Kentucky (6b) with a lot of ambitious vines vying for supremacy. This extraordinarily dainty plant mana...Read More

C
ROSLINDALE, MA | June 2015 | negative

Self-sows around, and has a deep root/rhizome. Flower is very small, I don't find this species especially ornamental, and it's gotten wee...Read More

T
Atlanta, GA (Zone 7b) | April 2015 | positive

This plant is not exactly pretty, but it has cute little flowers and is very good to add to a butterfly garden because it is a host plant...Read More

H
H
Sebring, FL (Zone 9b) | November 2013 | neutral

While it grows like wildfire here in 10b and fruits just as aggressively, it has little cosmetic appeal to me. The flowers are small and ...Read More

B
Melbourne, FL | November 2011 | positive

I live in Melbourne Florida and have this dainty yellow passionvine growing wild all over my yard. However the zebra longwings and the g...Read More

T
T
Evening Shade, AR (Zone 7a) | September 2011 | positive

We bought our raw/undeveloped land (foothills of the Arkansas Ozarks) in the summer 0f '09 and moved onto it in September of that year. ...Read More

M
Sebastian, FL | June 2010 | positive

Found a volunteer of this Passiflora variety coming up in a stand of Confederate Jasmine along an east facing wall. It has been blooming...Read More

C
Cambridge, MA | August 2009 | positive

This species grows well in full sun to part-shade in Rochester, NY, and Cambridge, MA (both USDA zone 6a), where they can get quite large...Read More

R
Statesville, NC | April 2009 | positive

This plant is native to a large range in the US. I think this plant should be grown more often but it definitely isn't for everyone. In N...Read More

S
Louisville, KY (Zone 6b) | January 2008 | positive

Passiflora lutea is actually the hardiest of all passiflora species. It is probably a zone 5 plant. It is native to the Southeast, rang...Read More

P
Kingsport, TN | May 2007 | neutral

Having never seen this plant before in my area of Northeast Tennessee, it took some time to finally identify it. It started as a single ...Read More

L
Magnolia, TX (Zone 8b) | August 2005 | neutral

Found growing wild north of Houston, TX. Pretty flowers, with interestingly shaped (almost grape-like) leaves.

E
Seffner, FL | June 2004 | positive

I found this growing under one of my oak trees. I found it because the Zebra long-winged butterfly was fluttering all around. With the ...Read More

C
Pocola, OK (Zone 7a) | June 2004 | neutral

We have just found this plant in my mother's yard alongside a fence in the shade. It took me forever to identify it. I think it is beau...Read More

J
Edgefield, SC (Zone 8a) | August 2003 | neutral

This plant is weedy, but interesting. The blooms are tiny and greenish colored, but have a slight sweet fragrance. I wouldn't plant it,...Read More

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