
Appearance
In Jammu, India, this plant is an annual, growing from May to December and flowering from June to October. In the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, located closer to the equator, it is a perennial, flowering around the year."Commelina benghalensis" produces three types of branches - aerial or negatively geotropic ones, subaerial or diageotropic ones, and underground or positively geotropic ones. The underground branches do not bear leaves.
Distribution
"Commelina benghalensis" is a wide-ranging plant, being native to tropical and subtropical Asia and Africa, an area otherwise known as the paleotropics. In China it is commonly associated with wet locations. There it can be found from near sea level up to 2300 metres. It is present from the provinces of Hebei and Shandong in the northeast, west to Sichuan and in all provinces south to Hainan, the southernmost province. It is also found in Taiwan. In Japan the plant is restricted to the southern portions of the country from the southern Kantō region westward and including the islands of Shikoku and Kyūshū. Although its roots and tubers are used as a food source, "C. benghalensis" is not cultivated in Ethiopia, where it grows as a weed.The plant has also been widely introduced beyond its range to the neotropics - the southeastern United States, California, Hawaii, Cuba, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Martinique, Montserrat, Barbados and St Vincent. In Puerto Rico the plant is known from a single collection from Cayey. In the southeastern United States the plant was collected in the 1928, while it was first collected in Hawaii in 1909. In the southeastern states it is present in Florida, Georgia, Louisiana and North Carolina and spreading. It was added to the Federal Noxious Weed List in 1983, and by 2003 was considered the most serious pest of Georgia's cotton crop due to widely used herbicides such as glyphosate having little effect on it. It was introduced separately to California in the 1980s, making it the only introduced species of "Commelina" in the western United States. It is associated with disturbed soils such as yards, lawns and cultivated areas, especially in cotton crops and orange groves.
Reproduction
Bengal dayflowers display an enormous diversity in reproductive systems. It produces three types of flowers -male, hermaphrodite chasmogamous and hermaphrodite cleistogamous. All three types develop on aerial branches, but only hermaphrodite chasmogamous flowers develop on subaerial branches, and only cleistogamous flowers develop on underground branches. Finally, some plants may produce female flowers on aerial branches. Developing flowers are covered in mucilaginous spathes.Flowers are zygomorphic. The petals are blue. The androecium has six stamens, of which only three are fertile. One of the fertile stamens is longer and yellow; the other two are shorter and grey in colour. Pollen grains are yellowish coloured and capsule shaped.
The gynoecium has three joined carpels. Aerial and subaerial branch flowers have five ovules per ovary; underground branch flowers have three.
Seeds are ovoid; 2 mm long and 1.5 mm wide. There are four types of seeds - large and small aerial and underground. Plants from large underground seeds grow fastest in the first 2–4 weeks and so seem to have better competitive ability. All the other types of seeds have a dormancy period. They may be produced to survive stressful periods or to spread to new areas. Kim Sang Yeol found that most seeds were of the small aerial type, and that only 2-4% of seeds were underground seeds.
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