Passion In the Garden
LBCC鈥檚 Jorge Ochoa Plays a Part in Discovery of New Passionflower

Staff Highlights
A passionflower.

海角社区 Horticulture Professor, Jorge Ochoa, has been recognized in his important role in discovering a new species of passionflower.

Ochoa鈥檚 first passion flower expedition took place in 2001 when he visited Costa Rica. Since then, he has been to Brazil, Ecuador, Columbia, Cuba, and Southern Mexico, all on exhibitions to look for new species of passion flowers native to those regions.

In 2011-2012, Ochoa participated in a project with scientists from universities in Missouri and Kansas to do the genetic analysis of a group of passion flowers. A visit to the Dominican Republic resulted in the discovery of a new plant, which was then cultivated and grown at 海角社区鈥檚 Horticulture garden on the Pacific Coast Campus. Ochoa successfully got the plant to flower, which was the first time it flowered in cultivation.

This flowering confirmed it was indeed an undescribed species of passionflower. Ochoa then recorded the flower, measuring characteristics such as the fruit, leaves, corona, and filaments. This allowed the type of specimen to be determined. A type specimen is the first record of any plant when it gets discovered. The study included a genetic analysis to put this new species into a family tree.

This first record is the type specimen, which was then deposited in the Missouri Botanic Gardens Herbarium. And as of this writing (early October) Passiflore intricata is again flowering at the 海角社区Horticulture Garden.

鈥淗aving the record of the flower, the flower verified it was indeed a new species,鈥 said Ochoa. 鈥淭he next step was to enter it for publication so it would be accepted as a new plant.鈥

It is common practice that when a new species has been determined/accepted into the scientific community, it must be published.

Ochoa鈥檚 work has now resulted in the discovery and publication of 鈥Passiflora intricata鈥 an apetalous (having no petals) new species from the Dominican Republic. The name 鈥intricata鈥 comes from the Latin word for tangled, which is reference to the flower鈥檚 long and slender filaments that look tangled (see photo). The discovery was recognized by the peer-reviewed scientific journal 鈥淧hytotaxa.鈥

To learn more about LBCC鈥檚 Horticulture Department, visit .