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sensitive plant

mimosa pudica

Description:

found these growing on the walking grass path to terry hersey park in houston. Is a creeping annual or perennial herb often grown for its curiosity value: the compound leaves fold inward and droop when touched or shaken, re-opening minutes later. The stem is erect in young plants, but becomes creeping or trailing with age. The stem is slender, branching, and sparsely to densely prickly, growing to a length of 1.5 m (5 ft). The leaves of the mimosa pudica are compound leaves. The leaves are bipinnately compound, with one or two pinnae pairs, and 10-26 leaflets per pinna. The petioles are also prickly. Pedunculate (stalked) pale pink or purple flower heads arise from the leaf axils. The globose to ovoid heads are 8–10 mm in diameter (excluding the stamens). On close examination, it is seen that the floret petals are red in their upper part and the filaments are pink to lavender. The fruit consists of clusters of 2-8 pods from 1–2 cm long each, these prickly on the margins.

Habitat:

is native to South America and Central America, but is now a pantropical weed.

Notes:

Mimosa pudica can form root nodules that are inhabitable by nitrogen fixing bacteria. Its extract immobilizes the filariform larvae of Strongyloides stercoralis in less than one hour. In contemporary medicine, Mimosa pudica is being investigated for its potential to yield novel chemotherapeutic compounds. It contains an alkaloid called mimosine, which has been found to have potent antiproliferative and apoptotic effects. Aqueous extracts of the roots of the plant have shown significant neutralizing effects in the lethality of the venom of the monocled cobra (Naja Kaouthia). It appears to inhibit the myotoxicity and enzyme activity of cobra venom

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10 Comments

SusanEllison
SusanEllison 12 years ago

@sttweets: you are most welcome, I did get some help naming it.

sttweets
sttweets 12 years ago

Thanks for all your hard work and explanation. I shot one the other week, and was still researching it's name. Now it's on ProjectNoah:
http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/658...

no joke - its work

Ashish Nimkar
Ashish Nimkar 12 years ago

hahahaha...you must be joking...Thanks for reminding that tree.

of course it is a herb. and that´s why i said it was m. pudica and not my first thought a. julibrissin.
sorry my brain sleeps after 36 hours awake

Ashish Nimkar
Ashish Nimkar 12 years ago

Can a tree look like such small weed..?
Albizia julibrissin is a big tree.
Mimosa pudica is a herb.
Isn't it a herb..?

no doubts, first I thought it could be a Albizia julibrissin, because of the flower... but now I´m sure it is a Mimosa pudica

Ashish Nimkar
Ashish Nimkar 12 years ago

Monkey mind tell what doubt you have..?

SusanEllison
SusanEllison 12 years ago

@monkey-mind...you are absolutely 100% correct..thanks..it checked out.

mimosa definitely - mimosa pudica?

SusanEllison
Spotted by
SusanEllison

Houston, Texas, USA

Spotted on Jun 21, 2011
Submitted on Jun 21, 2011

Spotted for Mission

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