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Morning glory

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Morning glories)
File:Morning-glory-C6295b.jpg
Morning glory flower
File:Ipomoea setosa MHNT.BOT.2021.17.17.jpg
Ipomoea setosa
File:Ipomoea muricata MHNT.BOT.2021.17.38.jpg
Ipomoea muricata

Morning glory is a family of common flowering plants known as Convolvulaceae which includes bindweed.

Behaviour[change]

Most morning glory flowers curl up and close during the warm parts of the day, and are wide open in the morning, like their name. On a cloudy day, the flower may last until night. The flowers usually start to fade a few hours before the petals start curling. They prefer full sun throughout the day. Some morning glories - such as Ipomoea muricata - are night-blooming flowers.

Cooking uses[change]

Ipomoea aquatica (known as "water spinach", "water morning-glory", "water convolvulus", "Ong-Choy", "Kang-kung", or "swamp cabbage") is used as a green vegetable.

References[change]