Black-bindweed is a
herbaceous vine growing to long, with stems that twine
clockwise round other plant stems. The alternate triangular
leaves are 1.5–6 cm long and 0.7–3 cm broad with a 6–15 (–50) mm petiole; the basal lobes of the leaves are pointed at the petiole. The
flowers are small, and greenish-pink to greenish white, clustered on short
racemes. These clusters give way to small triangular
achenes, with one
seed in each achene. The flowers have 5
sepals, the 3 outer ones are larger and show a keel. It has 5 stamens and the fruit grows to 4 mm long. While it superficially resemble bindweeds in the genus
Convolvulus there are many notable differences; it has ocrea (stipule-sheath at nodes), which
Convolvulus does not; and
Convolvulus has conspicuous trumpet-shaped flowers while Black-bindweed has flowers that are unobtrusive and only about 4 mm long. ==Distribution and habitat==