Plants are remarkably slow growing, whether grown in the
greenhouse or outdoors. Greenhouse-grown plants in northern
Europe do not tolerate the hot summer temperatures and cold short day-length winters very well, and as a result, do not thrive. At the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew a ten-year-old specimen of
P. lindeniana grown with a minimum temperature of 10◦C and maximum temperature of 16 °C and moderate shading flowered for the first time in 2009. According to Meadows, in
Helensville, New Zealand, at an elevation of about 80 m,
P. lindeniana grown outdoors flowered after about ten years. Fruit set and matured when flowers were hand pollinated from another tree several hundred metres away. Both the trees growing outside in the Helensville location are in moderate shade, one in a moderately well drained silty sand-clay loam, another in a well-drained, leached sandy loam. Air temperatures do not fall much below about 5 °C, and daytime air temperatures rarely exceed 27 °C in summer. The Kew trees are growing in "slightly acidic, open, peat free, multipurpose substrate compost with added
Perlite and fine bark" according to Vanderplank. Seed germinates very well if it is sown in a free draining seed raising mix and kept warm (23–26 °C is recommended).
Passiflora lindeniana can be propagated by
cuttings if semi-ripe, woody nodal or
internodal cuttings are used. Use of an IBA
rooting hormone increases the chance of success. Cuttings should be taken in the spring or autumn, and placed in a humid environment in a free draining rooting medium. Plants can also be propagated by
air-layering. It may be useful to treat the cut surface of the
marcot with IBA hormone.
Passiflora lindeniana has been successfully
grafted onto
P. caerulea and
P. macrophylla. In glasshouse cultivation the major pests are red spider
mite,
mealy bug,
thrips and scale insects. In outdoor cultivation in New Zealand there are no significant pests. == References ==