Plant Image Data Base
Vinca
minor
Myrtle, Creeping Myrtle, Periwinkle, or Vinca
(Apocynaceae - Dogbane Family)
Form
- short evergreen perennial groundcover
- maturing at about 6" tall and up to 3' in diameter for each
individual plant
- trailing mat, prostrate mat, or mounding mat growth habit
- medium growth rate
Culture
- partial sun to full shade
- performs best in rich, evenly moist, well-drained soils in partial shade,
but is adaptable to soils of average fertility, soils of various pH, and
occasional drought (once established), but is not tolerant of full sun
(which quickly leads to decreased vigor and chlorotic foliage)
- propagated primarily by rooted stem cuttings but also by crown division
- Dogbane Family, with Vinca Stem Blight (Phomopsis livella) as a
noticeable disease that occurs under constantly moist to wet conditions; it
is a fungus that, although usually not life-threatening or causing large
patches of the groundcover to die out, girdles a stem at its base and causes
the stem and its foliage to turn black and brown as they die
- abundantly available in flats (as rooted plugs, in cell packs or peat
pots), or in container form
- plant the plugs of groundcover about 1' apart, mulch at transplanting, and
keep the planting evenly watered for the first season of establishment, to
promote rooting-in of the plug and adventitious rooting at the nodes of the
trailing stems
Foliage
- opposite along the thin stems, but clustered at stem terminals
- evergreen, elliptic, and entire, being lustrous dark green above with a
subtle white mid-vein
- cultivars exist that have creamy-white, silvery-white, gold, or yellow
variegation of the foliage
Flowers
- blue-purple is the predominate color, but cultivars also exist that are
reddish-lavender or white
- solitary flowers originate from the leaf axils, composed of five fused
pinwheel-like petals and a short tubular throat, blooming in late March and
April and sporadically throughout the growing season, often sparsely
arranged along the stems but sometimes densely flowering in Spring
Fruits
- brown, minute, and ornamentally inconspicuous
Twigs
- light green and very slender, with green Winter buds that are very small
ID Summary
- dark evergreen, elliptical, shiny, opposite leaves on thin, light green,
trailing stems that root at the nodes are the main feature of this
groundcover for shady spots, with sparse blue-purple flowers in Spring
- Myrtle is sometimes confused with Purple Wintercreeper (Euonymus
fortunei 'Colorata'), but the latter has serrated margins on opposite
leaves that bronze heavily in Winter, with larger and more dense foliage on
thicker stems, and the stems usually do not root at the nodes, but rather
climb supportive structures for short distances, or may mound upon
themselves as a groundcover up to 2' in height
Function
- evergreen groundcover in shady locations at foundations, beds, raised
planters, or under woody plants
Texture
- fine texture
- thick density
Assets
- evergreen groundcover
- has sparse but attractive Spring blossoms (rare for an evergreen
groundcover)
Liabilities
- can become invasive beyond its intended boundaries (even into lawn areas)
by its trailing and shallowly-rooting stems
- Vinca Stem Blight will cause death of individual stems, with the resulting
persistent brown foliage scattered amongst the living groundcover
- retains some blown leaves and debris in Autumn and Winter
- declines and becomes chlorotic when improperly placed in full sun
Habitat
- zones 3 to 8
- native to Europe and Western Asia
Variants
- Vinca minor 'Alba' - white-flowering form
- Vinca minor 'Atropurpurea' - reddish lavender to red-violet flowers
- Vinca minor 'Bowles' - has larger foliage that tends to mound
instead of creep or trail, and flowers that are slightly larger and more
dense with an intense blue or purple color; the standard and most common
form available
- Vinca minor 'Ralph Shugert' - leaf margins are sharply defined by a
creamy-white variegation, with blue-purple blossoms
Purpose
- Myrtle is an evergreen Spring-flowering groundcover that performs very
well in moist, shady spots.
Summary
- Vinca minor is a good evergreen groundcover in partial shade with
small Spring blue-purple flowers.
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