Euphorbia hirta L. (redirected from: Chamaesyce hirta)
Family: Euphorbiaceae
[Chamaesyce hirta (L.) Millsp.,  more...]
Euphorbia hirta image

Duration: Annual

Nativity: Native

Lifeform: Forb/Herb

General: Few-stemmed, erect to decumbent, sparingly branched annual 2-25 cm tall, stems strigose to pilose with yellowish hairs.

Leaves: Stout petioles 1-2 cm long, pilose, narrowly lanceolate, rhombic-lanceolate, or ovate leaves 3-12 mm wide, 8-30 mm long, acute at apex, asymmetrical at base, sharply to inconspicuously serrulate, sparsely hispid but glabrate above, appressed to spreadingly hirsute beneath, often reddish or with reddish splotches on lower surface.

Flowers: Cyathia in dense pedunculate heads, peduncles sparsely strigose to glabrate, involucres obconic-campanulate .6-.9 mm in diameter, strigose without, glabrous within; glands stipitate, orbicular to transversely oval, appendages white or sometimes absent; staminate flowers 2-8 per cyathium.

Fruits: Capsule 1-1.2 mm long, truncate at base.

Ecology: Found on sandy or light soil from 3,000-5,000 ft (914-1524 m); flowers March-September.

Notes: The cyathia in dense pedunculate heads helps to separate out this species.

Ethnobotany: Unknown for this species, other species in genera have medicinal use.

Etymology: Euphorbia is named for Euphorbus, Greek physician of Juba II, King of Mauretania, hirta means hairy.

Synonyms: Euphorbia hirta, Euphorbia pilulifera

Editor: SBuckley, 2010

Decumbent to erect, to 6 dm, usually conspicuously hairy, with oblong or lance-oblong lvs 1-4 cm and the fls numerous in dense, axillary and terminal, often peduncled clusters, is widespread in trop. and warm-temp. regions, including s. U.S., but only rarely adventive and probably not persistent with us.

Gleason, Henry A. & Cronquist, Arthur J. 1991. Manual of vascular plants of northeastern United States and adjacent Canada. lxxv + 910 pp.

©The New York Botanical Garden. All rights reserved. Used by permission.

Euphorbia hirta image
Euphorbia hirta image
Euphorbia hirta image
Euphorbia hirta image
Euphorbia hirta image
M. Fagg, Australian National Botanic Gardens