![]() ![]() Naturalised overseas in southern Europe, the Azores, southern Africa, New Zealand and southern USA (i.e. Also naturalised on Lord Howe Island and possibly naturalised in the ACT and Tasmania. ![]() Less common or occasionally naturalised in the coastal districts of central Queensland, in inland New South Wales, in Victoria, in south-eastern South Australia and in the coastal districts of south-western Western Australia. It is most common in eastern New South Wales and south-eastern Queensland. Widely naturalised, particularly in the warmer temperate and sub-tropical regions of eastern Australia. Moth vine ( Araujia sericifera) has been widely cultivated as a garden ornamental, however it is rarely deliberately cultivated in gardens nowdays. ![]() Brazil, Peru, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay). FamilyĪsclepiadaceae (the ACT, Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory)Apocynaceae (Queensland and New South Wales) Common Namesīladder flower, bladder-flower, calico vine, Cape dandelion, cruel plant, cruel vine, false choko, kapok vine, milk vine, milk weed, moth catcher, moth plant, moth vine, moth-plant, mothplant, mothvine, Peruvian creeper, stranglehold plant, white bladder flower, white bladder-flower, white bladderflower, white moth plant, white moth vine, white moth-plant Origin ![]()
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