Skip to main content
Sessile Joyweed

Sessile Joyweed

Alternanthera sessilis

0 0

Sessile Joyweed (Alternanthera sessilis), also known as Dwarf Copperleaf, Mukunuwenna in Sinhala, or Matikaduri in Assamese, is a creeping or ascending perennial herb in the family Amaranthaceae, widely cultivated and gathered across the tropics as a nutritious leaf vegetable. In Sri Lanka, it holds the distinction of being considered the most important traditional leaf vegetable, consumed daily by millions.

• Considered the most important leafy vegetable in Sri Lankan cuisine
• The species epithet "sessilis" refers to the stalkless (sessile) leaves
• Both green and red-purple cultivars exist — the red forms are used ornamentally in aquariums
• Rich in iron and traditionally used to treat anemia in Ayurvedic medicine
• One of the most widely distributed tropical vegetables, found on every continent
• Often grows as an aquatic or semi-aquatic plant in rice paddies and marshy areas

Taxonomy

Kingdom Plantae
Phylum Tracheophyta
Class Magnoliopsida
Order Caryophyllales
Family Amaranthaceae
Genus Alternanthera
Species Alternanthera sessilis
Alternanthera sessilis is native to the tropical and subtropical regions of the Old World.

• Now pantropical in distribution, found across Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Americas
• Occurs in wet, marshy areas, along stream banks, in rice paddies, and in damp waste places
• Found at elevations from sea level to approximately 1,800 meters
• Has been used as a vegetable and medicinal plant in Ayurvedic medicine for over 3,000 years
• In Sri Lanka, it is the most commonly consumed leafy vegetable and is deeply embedded in the food culture
• First described by Linnaeus in 1753 (as Achyranthes sessilis, later transferred to Alternanthera)
• Now naturalized throughout the tropics and subtropics
• Often harvested from rice paddy margins and drainage canals
• Both wild-harvested and cultivated commercially in South and Southeast Asia
A prostrate to ascending, perennial herb forming mats or growing erect to 15 to 40 cm tall.

Stems:
• Creeping to ascending, rooting at the lower nodes
• Green to reddish-purple, smooth, somewhat succulent
• Cylindrical, solid

Leaves:
• Lanceolate to oblanceolate or spatulate, 2 to 6 cm long and 0.5 to 2 cm wide
• Green to dark green (sometimes purplish in red forms)
• Sessile (stalkless) or with very short petioles — the defining feature
• Entire margins, slightly thick, smooth
• Opposite arrangement at each node

Flowers:
• Small, 3 to 5 mm, white to silvery-white
• Born in dense, ovoid to cylindrical heads (spikes) 5 to 12 mm long
• In the leaf axils, sessile
• Five tepals, five stamens
• Blooms year-round in the tropics

Fruit:
• Small, utricle (bladder-like fruit), 1.5 to 2 mm
• Contains a single, lens-shaped seed
• Seeds are dark brown to black, shiny
Alternanthera sessilis is a widespread tropical aquatic and semi-aquatic perennial playing important ecological roles in wetland systems.

Habitat:
• Native to the tropical and subtropical regions of the Old World
• Now pantropical — found across Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Americas
• Occurs in wet, marshy areas, along stream banks, in rice paddies, and in damp waste places
• Found at elevations from sea level to approximately 1,800 meters
• Grows as an aquatic or semi-aquatic plant, tolerating periodic flooding and waterlogged soils
• Prefers warm, humid tropical conditions with temperatures consistently above 20°C
• USDA zones 9–12 (tropical perennial, frost-sensitive)

Growth Habit:
• Prostrate to ascending perennial herb forming dense mats or growing erect to 15 to 40 cm tall
• Roots freely at the nodes, allowing rapid vegetative spread across wet ground
• Both green and red-purple forms exist — the red forms contain betacyanin pigments
• Thrives in full sun to partial shade, adapting to a wide range of light conditions
• Can grow fully submerged in shallow water for extended periods

Pollination:
• Small, white, clover-like flower heads are primarily self-pollinating
• Wind may assist in pollen transfer between plants in dense mats
• Insect pollination by small flies and beetles occurs but is not essential
• Seed production is prolific, contributing to its pantropical distribution

Ecological Role:
• Dense mats along waterways stabilize banks and reduce erosion during flooding
• Provides important habitat for aquatic invertebrates, frog tadpoles, and small fish in rice paddies and drainage canals
• Used in traditional wastewater treatment systems — absorbs heavy metals and excess nutrients from polluted water
• Leaves serve as food for herbivorous fish and waterfowl in Asian wetland ecosystems
• The red-purple cultivars are popular in the aquarium trade, providing underwater habitat structure

Invasive Status:
• Can form dense mats that outcompete other aquatic vegetation in some regions
• Considered a minor weed in rice paddies and irrigation systems in parts of tropical Asia
• Not listed as a noxious weed in most countries; generally managed through normal cultivation practices
• Widely welcomed as a volunteer edible vegetable in tropical homegardens
Sessile joyweed is a highly nutritious leaf vegetable.

• Per 100 g fresh leaves: approximately 30 to 45 kcal
• High in protein for a leaf vegetable (approximately 3 to 5 g per 100 g)
• Very rich in iron (5 to 10 mg per 100 g) — one of the richest leafy sources of iron
• Excellent source of calcium (150 to 300 mg per 100 g)
• Good source of vitamins A, C, and K
• Contains phosphorus, potassium, and magnesium
• Provides dietary fiber
• Rich in antioxidant compounds including phenolic acids and flavonoids
• Contains beta-carotene in significant amounts
• Traditionally used in Ayurvedic medicine to treat iron-deficiency anemia
Propagated by seed or, more commonly, by stem cuttings.

• Stem cuttings: take 10 to 15 cm cuttings from healthy plants
• Plant cuttings directly in moist soil; rooting in 5 to 7 days
• Seeds: sow in nursery beds and transplant seedlings
• Space plants 10 to 15 cm apart in rows 20 to 30 cm apart
• Prefers wet, marshy, or waterlogged conditions — ideal for rice paddy margins
• Also grows in regular garden soil with adequate moisture
• Adaptable to a wide range of soils including heavy clay
• Requires full sun for best growth; tolerates partial shade
• Very easy to grow; virtually maintenance-free in wet conditions
• Harvest begins 20 to 30 days after planting
• Cut stems 5 to 10 cm above ground; regrows rapidly
• Multiple harvests possible every 2 to 3 weeks
• In Sri Lanka, often cultivated as a perennial ground cover that is continuously harvested
Culinary uses:
• In Sri Lanka, the most common preparation is "mallun" — leaves cooked with grated coconut and spices
• Used in sambol (a Sri Lankan relish) with chili, onion, and lime
• In India, cooked as a potherb with lentils, garlic, and spices
• In the Philippines, added to soups and stews
• In Vietnam, used in canh (soup) dishes
• Leaves can be stir-fried with garlic and fermented shrimp paste
• Used in traditional Thai sour soup (kaeng som)
• Combined with other greens in complex multi-vegetable dishes
• Sometimes juiced as a health tonic
• In Indonesia, used in sayur (vegetable soup)

Fun Fact

Sri Lankans eat so much sessile joyweed that the Sinhala word "mukunuwenna" is essentially synonymous with "leafy vegetable" — it is to Sri Lanka what spinach is to the West

Learn more
Share: LINE Copied!

Related Plants