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Mikania scandens is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae.Its common names include climbing hempvine, climbing hempweed, and louse-plaster. [1] It is native to the eastern and central United States, with its distribution extending into Tamaulipas, Mexico. [1]
Commelina diffusa, sometimes known as the climbing dayflower or spreading dayflower, is a pantropical herbaceous plant in the dayflower family.It has been introduced to the southeastern United States where it is most common in wet disturbed soils.
Artabotrys hexapetalus, the climbing ylang-ylang, is a shrub found in India through to Burma, southern China and Taiwan, [1] having flowers that are renowned for their exotic fragrance. [2] It is also called ylang-ylang vine or tail grape in English, with a variety of names in other languages.
It is scandent, climbing using modified leaf-tip tendrils, the stem reaching 4 m (13 ft) long. [7] The leaves are mainly alternately arranged, but they may be opposite, as well. They are somewhat lance-shaped and tipped with tendrils, and they are up 13 to 20 cm (5.1 to 7.9 in) long.
It is a vine or semi-climbing shrub with puberulent stems, sometimes reaching 10 cm (3.9 in) in diameter. Leaves are elliptical-oblong, 5–16cm long and 3–8cm wide, apex acute or obtuse, base wedge-shaped, entire margin, sometimes sinuous, glabrous or pubescent, rough to the touch; petiole 0.2–1 cm long.
Asparagus setaceus, with the common names of common asparagus fern, asparagus grass, [2] lace fern, climbing asparagus, or ferny asparagus, is a climbing plant in the family Asparagaceae. [3] Despite its common name, the plant is not a true fern , but has leaves that resemble one.
Ficus pumila, commonly known as the creeping fig or climbing fig, is a species of flowering plant in the mulberry family, native to East Asia (China, Japan, Vietnam) [2] and naturalized in parts of the southeastern and south-central United States. [3] [4] It is also found in cultivation as a houseplant.
Senecio angulatus, also known as creeping groundsel [5] and Cape ivy, [6] [7] is a succulent flowering plant in the family Asteraceae that is native to South Africa.Cape ivy is a scrambling [8] herb that can become an aggressive weed once established, making it an invasive species.