Amaranthus cruentus L.
Family: Amaranthaceae
Red Amaranth,  more...
[Amaranthus hybridus subsp. cruentus (L.) Thellung,  more...]
Amaranthus cruentus image
Kurt Stueber  

Plants almost glabrous or slightly pubescent distally, especially when young. Stems erect, green or reddish purple, branched distally, mostly in inflorescence, to nearly simple, 0.4-2 m. Leaves: petiole 1/2 as long as to ± equaling blade; blade rhombic-ovate or ovate to broadly lanceolate, 3-15(-20) × 1.5-10(-15) cm, occasionally larger in robust plants, base cuneate to broadly cuneate, margins entire, plane, apex acute or subobtuse to slightly emarginate, with mucro. Inflorescences terminal and axillary, erect, reflexed, or nodding, usually dark red, purple, or deep beet-red, less commonly almost green or greenish red, leafless at least distally , large and robust. Bracts narrowly spathulate, 2-3 mm, equaling or slightly longer than tepals, apex short-spinescent. Pistillate flowers: tepals 5, oblong to lanceolate, not clawed, equal or subequal, 1.5-3 mm, apex acute; style branches erect or slightly reflexed; stigmas 3. Staminate flowers at tips of inflorescences; tepals 5; stamens (4-)5. Utricles obovoid to elongate-obovoid, 2-2.5 mm, smooth or slightly rugose distally, dehiscence regularly circumscissile. Seeds usually white or ivory, with reddish or yellowish tint, sometimes dark brown to dark reddish brown, broadly lenticular to elliptic-lenticular, 1.2-1.6 mm diam., smooth or indistinctly punctate.

Flowering summer-fall. Near places of cultivation; Ariz., Calif., Conn., Ill., Ind., Ky., Maine, Md., Mass., Mich., Nebr., N.H., N.J., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Oreg., Pa., R.I., S.C., Tex., Utah, Vt., Wash., W.Va., Wis.; Central America; South America; cultivated widely.

Amaranthus cruentus is cultivated as ornamental and pseudocereal almost worldwide from tropical to warm-temperate regions. While reported as naturalized in several states, most specimens identified as this species are referable to A. hybridus or other native species. Escaped plants of A. cruentus sometimes occur near places of cultivation (see note under A. caudatus). No attempt has been made to summarize distribution data for such escapes.

Amaranthus cruentus originated from A. hybridus (most probably in cultivation in Central America), with which it shares almost all major morphologic characteristics. Inclusion of cultivated forms in A. hybridus in a broad sense is thus rather justified. Cultivated species traditionally have been treated as separate taxa in horticultural and agricultural literature, and we prefer to maintain the current convenient usage of these names.

From Flora of Indiana (1940) by Charles C. Deam

This is a garden escape to roadsides, waste places, and dumps, which I have seen many times but never collected. I have no evidence that it can maintain itself in competition although it has maintained itself in our garden for several years.

Cultigen apparently derived from A. hybridus; infl large and showy, mostly bright red in life, lax, at least the terminal thyrse generally nodding or drooping; bract of the pistillate fls with slender midrib, not surpassing the fr; sep 5, straight, unequal, the shorter (inner) ones less than 2 mm, oblong, acutish, ca half as long as the fr; style-branches erect; seeds in ornamental forms dark brown; 2n=32, 34. Originally cult. for grain and dyestuff, now relictual as a grain-plant, but widely cult. as an ornamental and pot- herb, and occasionally escaping or persistent, but scarcely established in our range. (A. hybridus ssp. c.)

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.

Amaranthus cruentus image
Kurt Stueber  
Amaranthus cruentus image
Amaranthus cruentus image
John Poulakis  
Amaranthus cruentus image
John Poulakis  
Amaranthus cruentus image
Kurt Stueber  
Amaranthus cruentus image
Tracey Slotta  
Amaranthus cruentus image
John Poulakis  
Amaranthus cruentus image
John Poulakis