Species

Bryonia cretica subsp. dioica

Etymology

dioica: two plants

Common Name(s)

white bryony

Family

Cucurbitaceae

Flora Category

Vascular - Exotic

Structural Class

Dicotyledonous Lianes and Related Trailing Plants

Habitat

Terrestrial. Disturbed and open forest and shrubland, stream edges

Features

Soft, summer-green, cucumber-like vine to 6 m tall, dying back in autumn to perennial tuber. Tubers brittle, branching, huge; branches 45-160 x 100- 800 cm, oriented vertical to horizontal. Stems arise from end of tuber, soft; with slender, coiling tendrils. Leaves to 15 x 15 cm, thin, 5-lobed, middle lobe longest. Flowers tubular, to 2 cm long, whitish with green stripes. Fruit round, 4-8 mm diam, smooth skinned, succulent, yellow turning red, many-seeded, 5-8 clustered.

Similar Taxa

Sicyos australis (mawhai) (indigenous) has prickly 1-seeded fruits. Tamus communis (black Bryony) is also similar.

Flowering

December, January, February

Flower Colours

Green,White

Fruiting

Jan-march

Year Naturalised

1991

Origin

Eurasia/Mediterranean

Reason For Introduction
Ornamental

Life Cycle Comments
Perennial.

Reproduction
Spreads by seeds and vegetatively by tuber fragments.

Seed
Many seeds contained within each fruit.

Dispersal
Tuber fragments via water, soil disturbance, garden refuse. Seed dispersed by birds.

Tolerances
Tolerates wet to seasonal drought, warm to cool, variety of soils, semi shade. Poisonous so not browsed.

References

View MAF - BNZ Species page

 

 

This page last updated on 3 Aug 2011