Skip Navigation
Sign In
  • Home
  • Search
    • Search Collections
    • Map Search
  • Chicago Botanic Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Denver Botanic Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Desert Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • NY Botanical Garden
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
    • Project Information
    • Checklists
    • Create a Checklist
    • Dynamic Key
  • Sitemap

Heliotropium curassavicum

Heliotropium curassavicum L.  
Family: Boraginaceae
salt heliotrope, more...Seaside Heliotrope, heliotrope, alkali heliotrope, quail plant (es: rabo de mico, hierba del sapo)
[Coldenia succulenta Peter]
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Max Licher
  • SW Field Guide
  • Gleason & Cronquist
  • Resources
Wiggins 1964, Felger 2000, Kearney and Peebles 1969, McDougall 1973
Duration: Annual Nativity: Native Lifeform: Subshrub General: Perennial herbs or rarely annuals, 10-50 cm tall, from rhizomes that send up scattered shoots; stems diffusely branched, semisucculent, bluish-glaucous, and entirely hairless. Leaves: Nearly sessile, alternate; blades mostly 2-6 cm long, 3-10 mm wide, lanceolate to oblanceolate or obovate with acute to rounded tips, fleshy, the surfaces glabrous and glaucous, often purplish in age. Flowers: White, in helicoid spikes, these sometimes in clusters of 3 or 4 at branch tips, tightly scorpoid at the tip in youth; corollas funnel-shaped, 3-6 mm wide, white with yellow center and fading purplish. Fruits: Depressed-globose, about 2 mm diameter, separating in to 4 ovoid nutlets, these rounded and smooth or faintly rugulose on the back. Ecology: Found in marshy soil, alkaline or saline soils, often along wetlands and in irrigated areas, below 5,000 ft (1524 m); flowers most of the year. Distribution: Widely distributed in the warmer parts of the Western Hemisphere. Notes: This blue-tinged, smooth-stemmed herb favors moist, saline habitats and is easily noticed by its attractive curling spikes of white small white flowers at the tips of stems. Its congener, Heliotropium convolvulaceum, is also found in the region but the two species look very different. H. convolvulaceum has hairy herbage and much larger flowers which are usually solitary in leaf axils rather than being arranged in helicoid spikes. The genus Heliotropium has at times been placed in 3 different families: Boraginaceae, Hydrophyllaceae, and Heliotropaceae. Ethnobotany: Seeds were made into a mush and eaten; the plants was also used to treat diarrhea, sore throats, venereal disease, and measles; it was used as a diuretic and an emetic, and pulverized roots were applied to sores and wounds. Etymology: Heilotropium is from the Greek helios, "sun," and trope, "turning," thus meaning "sun-turning;" curvassicum refers to Curacao, the island in the Dutch West Indies. Synonyms: None Editor: SBuckley 2010, AHazelton 2015
Vascular plants of NE US and adjacent Canada
Glabrous perennial with scattered stems from stout creeping roots, somewhat fleshy, prostrate or decumbent, 2-5 dm; lvs linear or linear- oblanceolate, 1-4 cm נ2-5 mm; spikes seldom over 5 cm, the terminal ones usually paired on a peduncle, the lateral usually solitary and sessile or nearly so; cor 2-3.5 mm wide, white with a yellow eye; mature cal spreading; fr depressed-ovoid, 1.5-2.5 mm, soon splitting into 4 nutlets; 2n=26, 28. Native of tropical Amer., established as a weed, especially in saline soil, in s. U.S. n. to Del. and occasionally as a weed farther n. May-Sept. Ours are var. curassavicum. The well marked var. obovatum A. DC. (H. spathulatum) of interior w. U.S., with broader, more oblanceolate or even oblate lvs 6-18 mm wide and with the cor 5-9 mm wide, often with a purple eye, may possibly extend to w. Minn.

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.
Heliotropium curassavicum
Open Interactive Map
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Liz Makings
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Frankie Coburn
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Cecelia Alexander
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Frankie Coburn
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Cecelia Alexander
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Liz Makings
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Sue Carnahan
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Cecelia Alexander
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Liz Makings
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Cecelia Alexander
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Cecelia Alexander
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
University of Florida Herbarium
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Heliotropium curassavicum image
Click to Display
100 Initial Media
- - - - -
View All Media
Institute for Museum and Library Services KU BI Logo Logo for the Biodiversity Knowledge Integration Center

This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services [MG-70-19-0057-19].

EcoFlora is part of the SEINet Portal Network. Learn more here.

Powered by Symbiota.