The fruits and their characteristics

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Only about 60 species produce edible fruits

All Passiflora produce fruits, although only those of about 60 species are actually edible. In this case, however, “edible” is not always to be equated with “tasty”, because the fruits of some types are rather questionable from a culinary point of view. Other species in turn develop inedible or even poisonous fruits.

also read

  • Are the fruits of the passion flower edible?
  • Passion flower: some species are poisonous
  • Passion Flower - Toxic to Cats?

Passiflora species with edible fruits

The following table lists the edible fruits of popular Passiflora species.

Passiflora German name origin blossoms pollination fruit
P. edulis Passion fruit Brazil, Paraguay, Argentina white-purple self-fertile brownish-red
P. quadrangularis Giant Grenadilla Central America, West Indies red, white-purple self-fertile only in the greenhouse / winter garden
P. ligularis Grenadilla Brazil, Peru, Venezuela light purple Cross-pollination orange
P. alata Winged passion flower Peru, Brazil Red Cross-pollination yellow / light orange
P. incarnata Flesh-colored passion flower Bahamas, southern USA, Brazil white-light purple self-fertile greenish yellow
P. caerulea Blue passion flower Argentina, Brazil blue White self-fertile edible but not very tasty
P. coccinea Red passion flower Brazil, Peru, Venezuela bright red Cross-pollination yellowish green
P. vitifolia Vine-leaved passion flower Nicaragua, Venezuela, Bolivia, Peru bright red Cross-pollination spherical

No fruit without pollination

From a botanical point of view, the Passion flower Berries because the fruit develops from a single ovary. It takes between two to three months from flowering to maturity, although a harvest can only take place after successful fertilization. However, only a few passion flowers are self-fertile; H. self-pollination is possible due to hermaphrodite flowers. Most passiflora, however, rely on cross-pollination or cross-pollination. In this case, you will need at least a second plant that is not genetically related to the one to be pollinated. The fertilization of a Passiflora with a clone, such as a self-grown cutting, is therefore not possible. To be on the safe side, it is best to pollinate yourself by hand using the tried and tested brush method - passion flower blossoms are often only fertile for a few hours.

Tips & Tricks

Even if you have a passiflora with inedible fruits, fruit production can be worthwhile. This is because this way you can use your Propagate the plant yourself and thus create a multitude of plants that are genetically different from one another.