Biology:Phyllanthus urinaria

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Short description: Species of plant, herb

Phyllanthus urinaria
Gardenology.org-IMG 8037 qsbg11mar.jpg
Scientific classification edit
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Phyllanthaceae
Genus: Phyllanthus
Species:
P. urinaria
Binomial name
Phyllanthus urinaria
Synonyms[1]
  • Phyllanthus cantoniensis Hornem.
  • Phyllanthus cantoniensis Schweigg.
  • Phyllanthus urinaria Wall. non L.

Phyllanthus urinaria, commonly called chamber bitter,[2] gripeweed, shatterstone, stonebreaker (but can refer to other Phyllanthus species as well) or leafflower, is a species of suffruticose (woody and perennial at the base with the above being herbaceous) and herb in the family Phyllanthaceae.

Plant description

Fruits and flowers of Phyllanthus urinaria

The plant, reaching around 2 feet, has small alternate leaves resembling those of the genus Mimosa, disposed in two ranges. The leaves are large at the tip and smaller towards the petiole. The leaves are closed at night and are open in the day. Flowers are greenish white, minute and appear at axillae of the leaves, as well as the seed capsules. Numerous small green-red fruits, round and smooth, are found along the underside of the stems, which are erect and red.

Foliage

This plant is considered a competitive weed in some regions, because of its great number of seeds, its high shade tolerance and its extensive root system.

Distribution

Although of Asian origin, the weed is widely found in all tropical regions of the world. In the United States , it is found in southern states such as Virginia,[3] Florida, Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina, New Mexico, Mississippi, and Texas . It is a warm-season, annual, broadleaf weed that emerges from warm soils beginning in early summer. It reproduces by seeds, which are found in the green, warty-like fruit attached to the underside of the branch

Germination

The plant is a summer annual and germinates from early summer to early fall, requiring warm soil and light.[4]

Subspecies

There are 3 known possible subspecies:[5][6]

  • Phyllanthus urinaria urinaria
  • Phyllanthus urinaria nudicarpus (L.) Rossignol & Haicour
  • Phyllanthus urinaria hookeri (Müll.Arg.) Hook.f.

Although they seem to not be well accepted taxa.[1]

References

Wikidata ☰ Q1131974 entry