Sphenoclea zeylanicaLatin nameSphenoclea zeylanica Gaertner FamilySphenocleaceae Common nameGooseweed SynonymsGaertnera pongati Retz., Pongatium indicum Lam., P. zeylanicum (Gaertner) Kuntze, P. spongiosum Blanco, Rapinia herbacea Lour., Reichelia palustris Blanco Geographical distributionSouth and Southeast Asia: Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia Myanmar, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam. Rest of the world: Bolivia, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Iran, Madagascar, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Paraguay, Peru, Senegal, Solomon Islands, Surinam, Tanzania, United States, Venezuela, and Zambia. MorphologyAn erect, branched herb, 7−150 cm tall. Leaf: simple and spirally arranged light green; blades oblong to lance-shaped, narrowed at the tip, 10 cm long, borne on short stalks. Inflorescence: green, cylindrical, 7.5 cm long and dense terminal spike; flowers densely crowded, white to greenish, sessile. Fruit: a flat, 4−5 mm diameter globular capsule. Seed: yellowish brown, 0.5 mm long. Agricultural importanceReported to cause yield loss of 25−50% in rice. Young plants and tips of older plants are steamed and eaten as a vegetable in Indonesia. ManagementCultural control: closed crop canopy limits germination and growth of the weed. Chemical control: Anilofos, bensulfuron, cinosulfuron, chlorimuron, metsulfuron, prazosulfuron, thiobencarb, oxadiazon, piperophos, and propanil are reported to be effective. Selected references
JLA Catindig, RT Lubigan, and D Johnson |