46 A.O. TUCKER AND J. JANICK
(a) (b)Fig. 1.43. Fuchsia thymifolia: (a) fol. 51r; (b) leaves and flowers ofF. thymifolia(Courtesy
of Todd Boland).
Y. Passifloraceae
- Fol. 23v.PassifloraSubgenusDecaloba,cf.P. morifolia(Fig. 1.44).
 From the flower alone, this is definitely aPassiflorasp. of subgenus
 Decaloba(Fig. 1.44a).Passiflorais primarily a New World genus (a few
 species also occur in Australia and Southeast Asia but not Europe). The
 prominent corona with filaments of the genusPassiflorais very distinc-
 tive and cannot be confused with any other genus. The paired petiolar
 glands in the upper third of the leaf, blue tints in the flower, and den-
 tate leaves that are deeply cordate only seem to match the variability
 ofP. morifoliaMast. (Killip 1938) (Figs. 1.44b and 1.44c), although the
 artist has made the leaves slightly more orbicular than they normally
 occur in mature foliage. However, young plants, that is, root suckers,
 often exhibit juvenile leaves that are orbicular, entire leaves.
