Print Fact SheetMelochia corchorifolia

Latin name

Melochia corchorifolia L.

Family

Sterculiaceae 

Common name(s)

Wire bush and redweed

Synonym(s)

Melochia concatenata L.; M. supina L.; Visenia corchorifolia (L.) Spreng.; Riedlea corchorifolia (L.) DC.; R. supine (L.) DC. 

Geographical distribution

South and Southeast Asia: Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Nepal, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Rest of the world: Australia, Africa, Fiji, Papua New Guinea, and United States (Louisiana). 

Morphology

Erect or spreading, branched, up to 130—cm—high, perennial or annual herb.

Stem: cylindrical with tough stringy bark and with scattered star-like hairs.

Leaf: simple, with 2—3—cm petiole, alternately arranged; blades oblong to ovate, 3—8—cm—long with saw-toothed margins.

Inflorescence: terminal head or borne on leaf axils; flowers crowded and intermixed with linear bracteoles; petals white, pink, or pale purple, obovate, about 7—mm—long.

Fruit: depressed globose capsule, 4—5—mm in diameter with slightly beard-like hairs.

Seed: grayish brown with black spots, obovoid, about 2.5—mm—long. 

Biology and ecology

Weed of dryland field crops, dry-seeded lowland rice, and some plantation crops.

Flowers year-round; propagates by seed.

Agricultural importance

Can cause serious yield loss in rice: up to 70% yield loss recorded in the Philippines. It is an alternate host of nematodes Meloidogyne acrita, M. incognita, and M. javanica. 

Management

Cultural control: hand weeding or hoeing during the seedling stage to remove the weed.

Chemical control: postemergence application of MCPA or 2,4-D in rice. 

Selected references

Galinato MI, Moody K, Piggin CM. 1999. Upland rice weeds of South and Southeast Asia. Manila (Philippines): International Rice Research Institute. 156 p.

Moody K. 1989. Weeds reported in rice in South and Southeast Asia. Manila (Philippines): International Rice Research Institute. 442 p.

Moody K, Munroe CR, Lubigan RT, Paller Jr. EC. 1984. Major weeds of the Philippines. Weed Science Society of the Philippines. College, Laguna (Philippines): University of the Philippines at Los Baños. 328 p.

Pancho JV, Obien SR. 1995. Manual of ricefield weeds in the Philippines. Muñoz, Nueva Ecija (Philippines): Philippine Rice Research Institute. 543 p.

Soerjani M, Kostermans AJGH, Tjitrosoepomo G. 1987. Weeds of rice in Indonesia. Jakarta (Indonesia): Balai Pustaka. 716 p.

Contributors

JLA Catindig, RT Lubigan, and DE Johnson