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Sea Blite

Sea Blite

Suaeda maritima

Sea Blite (Suaeda maritima) is a succulent annual herb in the family Amaranthaceae, growing in the extreme environment of coastal salt marshes and mudflats. A true halophyte (salt-loving plant), it thrives in conditions that would kill almost any other vegetable, and its fleshy, salty leaves have been gathered as a wild food in coastal communities for centuries. When cooked, its tender stems and leaves make a unique, naturally salted green vegetable.

• A true halophyte — it not only tolerates salt but actually requires it for optimal growth
• The leaves taste naturally salty, eliminating the need to add salt when cooking
• Turns brilliant red in autumn, coloring salt marshes with vivid patches of crimson
• One of the most salt-tolerant plants on Earth, surviving in seawater-strength salinity
• The name "blite" comes from the Latin "blitum," an old name for amaranth-like plants
• In Japan, it is cultivated commercially as a premium vegetable called "okahijiki" (land seaweed)

Taxonomie

Règne Plantae
Embranchement Tracheophyta
Classe Magnoliopsida
Ordre Caryophyllales
Famille Amaranthaceae
Genre Suaeda
Species Suaeda maritima
Suaeda maritima is native to the coasts of Europe, Africa, and Asia.

• Found along the Atlantic coast of Europe from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean
• Also occurs along the coasts of Africa, the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia, Japan, and Australia
• Grows exclusively in coastal salt marshes, mudflats, and saline habitats
• Found at the tidal zone, regularly inundated by seawater
• Has been gathered as a wild food by coastal communities for millennia
• First described by Linnaeus in 1753 (as Salsola maritima, later transferred to Suaeda)
• In Japan, it has been cultivated as a specialty vegetable since the Edo period
• The genus Suaeda contains approximately 100 species, distributed worldwide in saline habitats
• Increasingly studied as a model organism for understanding salt tolerance in plants
A fleshy, succulent annual herb growing 10 to 40 cm tall.

Stems:
• Erect to procumbent, branched, green to yellowish-green
• Becoming red to crimson in autumn
• Fleshy, somewhat woody at the base

Leaves:
• Linear to narrowly cylindrical (terete), 1 to 3 cm long and 1 to 2 mm wide
• Fleshy, succulent, bright green, turning red in autumn
• Sessile, alternate
• Naturally salty to the taste due to salt accumulation in the tissues

Flowers:
• Very small, 1 to 2 mm, greenish, in small clusters in the leaf axils
• Five tepals, somewhat fleshy
• Inconspicuous, wind-pollinated

Fruit:
• Small, flattened utricle, 1 to 2 mm
• Enclosed in the persistent tepals
• Contains a single, tiny, black seed
• Seeds dispersed by tides and water
Suaeda maritima is an extreme halophyte uniquely adapted to life in coastal salt marshes and tidal zones.

Habitat:
• Native to the coasts of Europe, Africa, and Asia, found along the Atlantic coast of Europe from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean
• Also occurs along the coasts of Africa, the Middle East, India, Southeast Asia, Japan, and Australia
• Grows exclusively in coastal salt marshes, mudflats, and saline habitats at the tidal zone
• Found at elevations from sea level to a few meters above high tide
• Requires saline conditions — actually grows better with some salt than without
• Inundated regularly by seawater during high tides
• USDA zones 5–10 (temperate to tropical coastal)

Growth Habit:
• Fleshy, succulent annual herb growing 10 to 40 cm tall
• C4 photosynthesis pathway enables efficient carbon fixation under saline stress
• Accumulates salt in vacuoles, maintaining turgor pressure in seawater-strength salinity
• Turns brilliant red in autumn due to betacyanin pigment production, coloring salt marshes crimson
• Completes entire life cycle during the warm season, dying back in winter

Pollination:
• Small, inconspicuous flowers are primarily wind-pollinated
• Self-pollination is common, ensuring seed production even in isolated salt marsh populations
• Flowering occurs from mid-summer through autumn
• Seeds are dispersed by tides and water currents, colonizing new mudflat areas

Ecological Role:
• Pioneer species in salt marsh succession — one of the first plants to colonize bare tidal mudflats
• Salt accumulation in tissues creates localized salt deposits that influence the distribution of other marsh plants
• Provides food and habitat for salt marsh invertebrates including specialized salt-tolerant insects
• Seeds are consumed by coastal birds including ducks, geese, and shorebirds during autumn migration
• Dense stands trap sediment, contributing to salt marsh accretion and coastal land building
• Important model organism for scientific research on salt tolerance mechanisms in plants

Conservation:
• Globally secure as a species due to its wide coastal distribution
• Local populations may be threatened by coastal development, land reclamation, and sea wall construction
• Cultivated commercially in Japan as the premium vegetable okahijiki
Sea blite is a mineral-rich vegetable with unique properties.

• Per 100 g fresh leaves: approximately 20 to 30 kcal
• Rich in sodium and other minerals — naturally high in salt
• Contains vitamins A and C
• Provides iron, calcium, iodine, and magnesium
• Good source of dietary fiber
• Contains antioxidant betacyanin pigments (responsible for the red coloration)
• The high mineral content makes it nutritious but very salty — best consumed in moderation
• Low in calories and fat
• Contains beneficial polyphenols
Not typically cultivated except in Japan, where it is grown as a specialty crop.

• Can be grown from seed in saline or coastal conditions
• Seeds require light for germination; scatter on the soil surface
• Requires saline soil or regular irrigation with saltwater — cannot grow in fresh conditions long-term
• Full sun
• Prefers sandy, well-drained, saline soils
• In Japan, grown in special beds and irrigated with diluted seawater
• Harvest young stems and leaves 30 to 50 days after sowing
• The plant is harvested before it turns red (while still green and tender)
• No fertilizers needed — the plant obtains nutrients from the saline environment
• Best managed as a wild-harvested plant in natural salt marshes
• Can be grown in containers irrigated with seawater solution
Culinary uses:
• In Japan, cultivated as "okahijiki" (land seaweed) — stems are lightly boiled and served as a premium vegetable
• Steamed or boiled briefly, then dressed with sesame oil and soy sauce
• Used in salads for a natural salty crunch
• Added to stir-fries and noodle dishes in Japanese cuisine
• In Europe, traditionally gathered from salt marshes and cooked like spinach
• The natural saltiness means no additional salt is needed in cooking
• Can be pickled in vinegar
• Used as a garnish for seafood dishes
• The crisp, succulent texture is valued in Japanese cooking
• In Korea, used in namul (seasoned vegetable side dishes)

Anecdote

Sea blite tastes so naturally salty that you don't need to add any salt when cooking it — it seasons itself from the seawater it grows in

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