A Passion Fruit Vine Sweetens the Dry Season


Passion fruit flowers attract many pollinators, including Jack Spaniard wasps

 

Ah, the idea of passion is so exhilarating, and the flowers present themselves to admirers with such abandon. Yet for us, their promise of sweet fruits has often remained unfulfilled. But this year we were actually blessed with a bowlful of yellow egg-shaped fruit to celebrate spring.   

 

I had cut the vine way back last summer because it seemed like it might be dead. Then In the late fall, when there was a lot of rain, I was happy to see that it perked up and started growing wildly - first up the fence and then all over a nearby tree.

 

I didn’t see any flowers, though. In February, one day we noticed a green passion fruit hanging in the tree. Very mysterious. The vine had twisted around the poor tree underneath it, and the leaves were all bunched up, so it was hard to see what was going on. Only the one fruit on the edge was easily visible, once you spotted it. But it turned out there were some others hiding inside the tangle, camouflaged because they were the same color as the leaves.  

 

A green passion fruit is hard to see among the leaves on the vine. 

 

I decided to leave the fruits on the tree until they dropped, rather than bringing them inside when they started to turn yellow. I wanted to see how long it would take for them to ripen naturally. (Often, if you put them in a paper bag they will ripen quickly on the counter.) These didn’t drop from the tree for a couple of months.   

 

In the meantime, after a bit of rain in March, I was excited to see some new flowers coming out. At first, they popped up on the vine like pods. Then the outer leaf-like sections opened, and white flower petals started breaking through. 

 

A passion fruit flower seems to burst out when it opens. 

 

Once the flowers were fully opened, they attracted bees, wasps and butterflies with their nectar. With passion fruit flowers, the nectar is produced below the flower at the base of the outer leaf. 

 

Large, solitary carpenter bees are major pollinators for passion fruit flowers. 

 

When big black carpenter bees come by to drink the nectar, their backs and legs get covered with pollen located on the (male) yellow anthers above them. Then when they go to the next flower, they transfer that pollen to the three-pronged stigma (female) part of the flower located higher up on the stalk. From there, the pollen gets drawn down inside into the flower’s ovaries, where fertilization of the ovule takes place, and the fruit can start to form.       

 


A carpenter bee moves on to the next flower carrying a load of yellow pollen. 

 

Transferring the pollen from one flower to another allows for cross-pollination, which mixes up the genes and allowing for better evolutionary adaptation possibilities. 

 

Different types of butterflies also came to eat nectar, and at the same time help with the flower’s pollination. A bright orange one was a Julia or Flambeau butterfly. 

 

A Julia (Flambeau) butterfly stops on a passion fruit flower for a taste of nectar. 

 

Once fertilization takes place, the flower’s ovary swells and slowly develops into the egg-shaped fruit we eat. 

 

The fruit develops in the flower’s ovary, with the three-pronged stigma still attached. 

 

Some of the passion fruits dropped from the tree while they were still green, then ripened after we brought them inside. One morning after I thought we had collected them all, I heard a little thump while I was out watering in the yard. I saw a Pearly-eyed Thrasher inside the tangled vine, and then looked down to find a new passion fruit on the ground. I felt like the universe had surprised me with the gift of a golden egg, and was happy to grab it before the ‘thrushie’ had a chance to bite into it.  

 

When the passion fruits get ripe, they look like yellow eggs. 

 

When you cut the fruit in half, there are lots of seeds inside, surrounded by a small amount of deliciously fragrant pulp. Sometimes I just eat the whole thing with a spoon, seeds and all. I have read that these seeds are full of nutrition and not toxic like some fruit seeds. Other times I put the seeds and pulp into a glass of water to soak and enjoy the sweet smell and delicately flavored juice that way. You can also use the juice to flavor elegant tropical cocktails.

 

I have also been spreading some of the seeds around the yard, in hopes that I will be able to grow more passion fruit vines for next year. 

 

A passion fruit is filled with seeds that are hard to separate from the pulp. 

















St. John Scarlet Ibis Said Goodbye Again to Snowy Egret Friend



It’s March and once again the snowy egret has left the wetland area near my house in Fish Bay on St. John. I believe this same bird was friendly with the scarlet ibis last year and returned for the winter so they could hang out together again. Particularly the ibis.  



It is difficult not to project some kind of romantic story on these two, given how closely they stick together during their time together. And how unhappy they both look when the snowy egret is getting ready to leave.


   

I assume the snowy egret is leaving because it is time to breed, and that means going somewhere else to find a mate, as there is no snowy partner available in this pond. Since this snowy egret seems to be migratory, it would probably fly over towards the east coast of the US. Or possibly just to another island not so far away. I have read that some snowy egrets breed in this area, but I am not sure where. 

 

Of course the scarlet ibis could also fly over to Necker Island in the BVIs to look for a suitable partner from the flock there. But possibly that flock is too big now and there isn’t enough food to support a larger group. 

 

Since the snowy egret left, the scarlet ibis seems to be seeking out other companions. Sadly, an early morning visit with the yellow-crowned night heron did not go very well. The ibis dropped down too close and angered the normally placid night heron, which was probably getting ready to go to sleep after a hard night catching land crabs.  




 

Ruffled up feathers quickly led to threatening behavior from the night heron. After that, the scarlet ibis avoided another confrontation by sneaking behind the night heron to get to the other side of the pond.  


 

A little blue heron did let the scarlet ibis tag along at a short distance behind, ­­­­­I don’t think they will become pals. 



 While I am delighted to have the scarlet ibis hanging out nearby, I do feel this bird is a bit sad. But maybe I am just projecting.