Bidens pilosa
Bidens pilosa, or Cobblers pegs, is a tropical to
subtropical herbaceous weed with edible and medicinal properties. It has a wide
distribution, with a centre of diversication in Mexico.
Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Identification
Square stem. Distinctive seed-head.
Leaflets simple, tripartite or dissected, margins
serrate.
Inflorescence discoid or radiate.
Linear, obcompressed-quadrangulate, attenuate achenes.
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Habitat/Cultivation
Inhabits wastelands, open fields, urban areas.
Native to Mexico, North and Central America.
Record of collection in Australia by Banks and Solander in 1770! |
Flowers Year round
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Fruits Year round
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Etymology
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Warning
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Edibility
Edible young leaves
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Medicinal
Anti-bacterial Anti-inflammatory Analgesic Anti-viral Anti-ulcerogenic
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This plant is quite variable in appearance, with these two
specimen growing within 2m of each other. Note the difference between the
leaves.
Fig.1. Simple leaves, with a slightly serrated margin |
Fig.2. Tripartite leaf, with a serrated margin |
Flowers may either have ray florets or be lacking, or even lose them fairly early.
Fig.3. Inflorescence with ray florets (white) |
Fig.4. Inflorescence without ray florets |
The seed heads (achenes) are an identifying feature, and
anyone familiar with this species will know the joys of reming seeds from
clothing (If the material is sturdy, seeds may be removed fairly quickly with a
knife held at an angle, and used with a movement somewhat like shaving with the
old-style razors). I found this interesting photo from a Hawaiian Botany page,
contrasting seed heads of different species.
Fig.5. Source-
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Fig.6. Seed head. Note barbs on the ends of the seed. This is what allows the seeds to "stick" to your clothing |
Fig.7. Seed head. |
The leaves of Bidens pilosa have been eaten in times of
famine in countries such as Africa, and have a strong flavour to them that many
find unpleasant. The trick with many leafy edibles is to eat the leaves before
the plant starts to flower. If you have ever tried picking loose leaf lettuce
after it starts to flower, in the hope of getting just a few more leaves before
the plant is inedible, you will know how bitter they can be. It is the same
with Bidens pilosa, and while the leaves still have a definite flavour to them,
they are more palatable when harvested before anthesis (flower growth).
B. pilosa has been eaten boiled in Mexico, and used as a tea
in the Marquesas, China and by Texas Indians. Both B. Pilosa nad B. chinensis
(alt. B. biternata) are sold in Java (young apical shoots), used to make wine
in the Phillipes (flowers or leaves, fermented with rice-sinitsit) and cooked
and eaten (young shoots & older leaves) in Nyasaland.
Although I cannot find record of it, I am fairly sure I have
come across some documentation about flour made from the seeds of B. Pilosa, if
you know the source, please let me know.
Bidens
pilosa has long been in use in traditional medicine, the heated crushed leaves
applied as a poultice to wounds and boils, the leaf juice used for ear aches
and eye complaints (the latter sometimes mixed with alum or lime), an infusion
of the root for eye complaints. An infusion is also used for coughs and colic,
with this plant also having use as an antidote to (unspecified) poison. The
leaves have been used for jaundice, fever, hepatitis, diarrhoea, worms,
pharyngitis, pneumonia and coughs in Brazil. The root is used to treat oedema
and snakebite in India. Although I had regarded this little plant as a weed, a member of BushcraftOz forums recently made a most surprising revelation, This plant was actuallt collected in 1770 by Banks and Solander! They have the specimen in the Royal Botanic Gardens herbarium; http://www.rbgsyd.nsw.gov.au/science/Evolutionary_Ecology_Research/Botany_of_Botany_Bay/plants/interesting_botany_bay_plants
Name
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Common name
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Family
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Food part used
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Preparation
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Medicinal part used
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Ailment
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Medicinal preparation
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Source
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaves
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Boiling
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Leaf
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Wounds
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Poultice- heated, crushed
leaves
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(3)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Boils
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Poultice- heated, crushed
leaves
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(3)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Earache
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Juice, warmed
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(4)
(5)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Eye complaints
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Juice, with or without alum
or lime
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Root
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Eye complaints
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Root- infusion
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Plant
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Cough
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Infusion
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(8)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Plant
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Collic
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Infusion
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(8)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Plant
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Poison antidote
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Juice
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(3)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Stomache ache
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Powdered leaf in enema
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(8)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Seeds
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Cuts
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Burnt seed
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(8)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Flowers
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Diarrhoea
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Diarrhoea
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Pharyngitis
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Jaundice
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Fever
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Worms
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Leaf
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Hepatitis
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(2)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Root
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Snakebite
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(7)
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Bidens pilosa
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Cobblers Pegs
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ASTERACEAE
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Root
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Oedema
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(7)
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References
(1)
Ballard , R. 1986. Bidens pilosa Complex
(Asteraceae) in North and Central America.
American Journal of Botany
73: 1452-1465
(2)
Botsaris, A. 2007. Plants used traditionally to treat malaria
in Brazil: the archives of Flora Medicinal. Journal of Ethnobiology and
Ethnomedicine 2007, 3:18
(3) Burkill, I.H. A
Dictionary of the Economic Products of the Malay Peninsula (Ministry of
Agriculture and Co-operatives, Kuala Lumpur, 1966).
(4)
Dalziel, J. M. Useful Plants of West
Tropical Africa . London. 1948.
(5)
DeWildeman, E. Sur des Plantes
Medici-nales ou Utiles du Mayumbe (Congo Belge). Mem. Inst. Royal Colonial
Belge. Vol. VI, Fasc. 4, Brussels. 1938
(6)
Morton, J. 1962. Spanish Needles (Bidens
pilosa L.) as a Wild Food Resource.
Economic
Botany. 16:173-179
(7)
Rao, J., Suneetha, J., Reddi, T. &
Kumar, O. 2011. Ethnomedicine of the Gadabas, a primitive tribe of
Visakhapatnam district, Andhra Pradesh. International Multidisciplinary
Research Journal, 1/2:10-14
(8)
Watt, J.M., & Breyer-Brandwijk, M.G. Medicinal and poisonous
plants of Southern and Eastern Africa, E. & S. Lvingstone Ltd.,
Edinburgh and London 1962
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