Alternanthera echinocephala, known as spiny-headed chaff flower,[1] is a shrubby plant in the family Amaranthaceae native to the Galápagos Islands, mainland Ecuador, and Peru. Its relatively large spiny "heads" of flowers distinguish it from other species of Alternanthera found in the Galápagos.
Alternanthera echinocephala is a much-branched shrub up to Шаблон:Convert tall. Its leaves are arranged oppositely and are narrow and pointed (lanceolate) with untoothed margins, Шаблон:Convert long. The flowers are grouped into somewhat rounded spikes ("heads") about Шаблон:Convert across. Each flower has one large and two small bracts below it, which form the most conspicuous part of the flower head. The bracts are greenish-white, sometimes with pinkish tones. The small sepals are similar in colour, only Шаблон:Convert long. The flowers have no petals and five stamens.[1]
Thirteen species of Alternanthera are found in the Galápagos Islands, of which six are endemics; A. echinocephala is said to be easy to distinguish based on its relatively large flower heads with their spiny appearance.[1]
Taxonomy
The species was first described in 1847, from the Galápagos Islands, by Joseph Dalton Hooker as Brandesia echinocephala. Paul Carpenter Standley transferred it to the genus Alternanthera in 1932.[2][3] The specific epithet echinocephala is derived from the Greek words echinos, hedgehog or sea urchin, hence meaning "spiny", and cephalos, here meaning "headed".[4]