Sandpaper Vine

Petrea volubilis L.

Verbenaceae

Location in our garden

Principal

Synonym

Petrea amazonica Moldenke

Petrea arborea Kunth

Petrea arborea f. albiflora Standl.

Habitus

Climbers. Deciduous shrub, growing up to 4 m tall

Part Used

  • Leaves
  • Flowers
  • Roots
  • Sap

Growing Requirements

  • Full Sunshine
  • Need Shade

Habitat

  • Forest
  • Roadside
  • Rocky Areas
  • Grassland

Overview

Sandpaper vine is native to Florida, Mexico to Tropical America, it was introduced many countries and it is cultivated some gardens an ornamental in the tropics and subtropics due to its attractive blue flowers.

Vernacular Names

Kudirai valuppu (India), Flor de Sâo Miguel (Brazilian), Purpurkranz (German), Yoch opp tzi min (Mexico), Bejuco de ajo (Panama), Fleur de la fête de dieu (French), Lan hua teng (Chinese).

Agroecology

Can be found in seasonal evergreen forest along streams, roadsides, steep limestone walls in dry forest, limestone outcrops, pastures on clay and rocky soil, and on rock. Succeeds in full sun and in light shade. Prefers a fertile, moist but well-drained soil, pH range of 5.6-7.5.

Morphology

  • Stems - branches slender, brownish or greyish, densely puberulent with mostly subappressed brownish hairs, prominently lenticellate. 
  • Leaves - elliptic, opposite,basally obtusely narrowed or acute, rarely rounded or subcordate,  apically acute or short-acuminate, rarely obtuse or emarginate, the margins entire, rarely sparsely dentate, mostly glabrous or subglabrous; mature petioles stout, 4-13 mm long, the axils often with dense fasciculations of bractlets, pubescence ferruginous, densely hirsute. 
  • Flowers - calyx light, the tube cylindric, bright blue, densely pubescent, gradually ampliate apically, the lobes oblong, rounded, 13-18 mm long, 4-6 mm wide; corolla hypocrateriform, bright blue, the tube infundibular; the staminode obsolete; ovary oblong - subobovate, glabrous; fruiting-calyx tough, the tube to 4 mm long, pubescent- densely long.
  • Fruit - small, 1 to 2-seeded, embedded in the short calyx tube.

Cultivation

  • Generative propagation is by seeds.
  • Vegetative propagation is by cuttings and layering.
  • Although its cultivation is limited by low temperatures, it can be grown as an annual or as a potted plant in temperate areas.

Chemical Constituents

Sterols, flavonoids, triterpenoids, apigenin, quercetin, 4,6 dimethylscutellarien, hypogallic acid (3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid), trans-caffeic acid, vanillic acid and acteoside.

Traditional Medicinal Uses

  • A methanol extract of the leaves (tincture) has shown hypoglycaemic activity.
  • Studies have shown anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic, antioxidant, anticancer and antipyretic properties. 
  • The flowers are combined with other ingredient (Couroupoume and goatweed) to make an infusion that is used to treat diarrhoea.
  • The leaves has shown hypoglycaemic activity, and they are used in the treatment of diabetes.
  • The crude sap obtained from the grated or macerated stem is used as a resolutive to soothe wounds and burns.
  • In the West Indies, leaves used for abortifacient and diarrhea.

Part Used

Reference Sources

  1. Abdelwahab, M. F., Abdel-Lateff, A., Fouad, M. A., Desoukey, S. Y., & Kamel, M. S. (2011). Phytochemical and biological study of Petrea volubilis L.(Verbenaceae). Bulletin of Pharmaceutical Sciences. Assiut, 34(1), 9-20.
  2. Rahman, M., Siddika, A., Bhadra, B., Rahman, S., Agarwala, B., Chowdhury, M. H., & Rahmatullah, M. (2010). Antihyperglycemic activity studies on methanol extract of Petrea volubilis L.(Verbenaceae) leaves and Excoecaria agallocha L.(Euphorbiaceae) stems. Advances in Natural and Applied Sciences, 4(3), 361-364.
  3. https://www.cabi.org/isc/datasheet/
  4. http://tropical.theferns.info/viewtropical.php?id=Petrea+volubilis