Host an Event Volunteer Join Tickets

Support the plant database you love!

Q. Who is Mr. Smarty Plants?

A: There are those who suspect Wildflower Center volunteers are the culpable and capable culprits. Yet, others think staff members play some, albeit small, role. You can torture us with your plant questions, but we will never reveal the Green Guru's secret identity.

Help us grow by giving to the Plant Database Fund or by becoming a member

Did you know you can access the Native Plant Information Network with your web-enabled smartphone?

Share

Ask Mr. Smarty Plants

Ask Mr. Smarty Plants is a free service provided by the staff and volunteers at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center.

Search Smarty Plants
See a list of all Smarty Plants questions

Please forgive us, but Mr. Smarty Plants has been overwhelmed by a flood of mail and must take a break for awhile to catch up. We hope to be accepting new questions again soon. Thank you!

Need help with plant identification, visit the plant identification page.

 
rate this answer
1 rating

Saturday - March 08, 2008

From: Houston, TX
Region: Southwest
Topic: Plant Identification
Title: Identification of maypop north of Houston
Answered by: Barbara Medford and Joe Marcus

QUESTION:

I have some land in the country an hour north of Houston, Texas. There is a wild plant which grows in clusters from 10' to 20' wide. These plants grow about 6" or 12" apart.They are approx. one foot high. They grow in shady damp areas, not swampy. They have a single stem with, I believe, 3 or 4 big leaves at the top, umbrella shaped. About 10" to 12" across. They are green. They do not flower. They produce a small bulb under the leaves on the stem. They sprout up in late February. An old lady in the area called them May-Pops. She said you could eat the bulb. Any idea of the name or family? I haven't seen these plants anywhere else.

ANSWER:

The first plant that comes to mind, especially given your location, is that it might be Passiflora incarnata (purple passionflower). A common name sometimes given to this plant is "maypop." Follow the link to read the information on it in our Native Plant Database and look at the pictures. Please read this previous Mr. Smarty Plants answer on the passionflower, which will give you a little more information on it. And, here is a page of images of the passionflower, with pictures of the fruit, leaves, etc. One problem with that identification is that you say these plants on your land do not flower; the Passiflora incarnata flowers profusely from April to September, and the plant can be quite aggressive, growing over small trees and spreading on the ground by tendrils.

Another possibility is the Air Potato, or Dioscorea bulbifera, a non-native of North America, which also has a small fruit or tuber-like growth, and is grown in West Africa for food and medicinal purposes. They were imported to Florida in about 1905 as an ornamental crop, but have become an invasive pest there. Here is a page of pictures of the Air Potato, so you can compare it to your plant. It does also flower, but flowers are small and yellowish and might have gone unnoticed. It is a perennial vine with broad leaves and two types of storage organs. The plant forms bulbils in the leaf axils of the twining stems, and tubers beneath the ground. Uncultivated plants, such as those growing wild, can be poisonous, so we would suggest you don't try any of the fruit of your plant until you are certain what it is.

The problem with both of these identifications is that both the passionflower and the air potato are vines with herbaceous stems; your description sounds more like a woody plant. If we haven't hit the nail on the head, please send us a digital picture and we'll take another stab at it. There are instructions on how to do this in the lower right-hand corner of the "Ask Mr. Smarty Plants" page.


Passiflora incarnata

Passiflora incarnata

Passiflora incarnata

 

 

 

 

More Plant Identification Questions

Tentative identification of Viola sagittata
June 23, 2007 - I am trying to find name of wildflower, Violet growing in adjoning woods. I have not been able to find it on internet. The non-basal leaves are very irregular in shape, grow to six inches, no two ali...
view the full question and answer

Identification of old plant called pinks
February 28, 2008 - For years my mother had a pretty pink flower in her yard. It was in a little cluster of green leaf like bush. She just called them pinks. They would close in the sun and open in the morning or afte...
view the full question and answer

Wildflower in southeastern Pennsylvania
May 20, 2008 - I live in southeastern Pennsylvania and want to identify a wild flower that is common along small town and rural roads and highways. It is blooming now (Mid May), has a flower spike similar to a larks...
view the full question and answer

Plant ID from North Carolina
August 16, 2010 - Hi Mr. Smartyplants, I know that you can identify blue cohash in a neat way: 3 stems which easy branch to 3 more stems which each branch into 3 more and then 3 leaves attached to each. Well, do you...
view the full question and answer

Plant identification of vine in Tennessee
January 06, 2012 - I have this vine that grows in my backyard and on the vine there are green balls about half the size of a hedge apple and inside balls are a bunch of seeds. The deer love to eat these. Do you know wha...
view the full question and answer

Support the Wildflower Center by Donating Online or Becoming a Member today.