7. Tragia L. (noseburn, tragia)
(Miller and
Webster, 1967)
Plants perennial
herbs, monoecious, usually with a woody vertical rootstock, with clear sap, variously
pubescent with shorter, unbranched, nonglandular hairs and at least some
longer, needlelike, stinging hairs. Stems solitary or few to several, prostrate
to ascending, sometimes twining, branched or unbranched. Leaves alternate,
short- to long-petiolate, the petiole attached at the base of the nonpeltate
blade. Leaf blades linear to lanceolate-triangular, ovate-triangular, or
heart-shaped, rounded, truncate, or cordate at the base, rounded or more
commonly angled or tapered to a usually sharply pointed tip, the margins
toothed, usually pinnately veined (sometimes appearing somewhat 3- or 5-veined
in T. cordata). Stipules scalelike or somewhat leaflike, 1–8 mm long,
green or tan to brown, usually persistent, narrowly lanceolate to narrowly
ovate-triangular, the margins usually with sparse to moderate spreading hairs.
Inflorescences lateral and opposite the leaves (also terminal elsewhere),
slender racemes with 1(2) pistillate flower(s) at the base and usually several
to many nodes with solitary staminate flowers toward the tip, the nodes usually
not crowded at flowering, each flower with a short, slender bract (this not
folded longitudinally but sometimes slightly concave). Flowers lacking a
corolla and nectar disc. Staminate flowers with the stalk jointed toward the
base (the portion below the joint persistent, the upper portion shed with the
flower), with 2 or 3 small stamens (more elsewhere) often having somewhat
thickened filaments (these usually fused at the base). Pistillate flowers with
the ovary having usually 3 locules and 1 ovule per locule, the 3 styles fused
toward the base, not further lobed or branched. Fruits 3-lobed (rarely 1 of the
carpels aborting and the capsule then with 2 larger lobes and 1 much smaller
lobe), more or less explosively dehiscent, the seed usually dispersed with the
associated portion of fruit wall. Seeds nearly spherical, the caruncle absent,
the surface smooth (appearing roughened elsewhere), yellowish brown to dark
brown, sometimes mottled with light yellow. About 150 species, North America to
South America, Caribbean Islands, Africa, Asia, Australia.
Steyermark
(1963) included only two species for Missouri, T. cordata and T.
urticifolia Michx. The plants that he placed into the latter species are
here treated as T. betonicifolia and T. ramosa, following Miller
and Webster (1967). True T. urticifolia is similar to T.
betonicifolia in its overall appearance but differs in its usually more
conspicuously hairy stems and in having the persistent basal portion of the staminate
flower stalks relatively long, longer than the subtending bract. It occurs from
North Carolina and apparently Kentucky to Florida west to Arkansas and Texas.
The
morphologically complex, multicellular stinging hairs of Tragia species
are sometimes relatively sparse, and the burning reaction may be delayed for a
few minutes after initial exposure. The burning sensation is caused by
injection of a mixture of mostly complex proteins into the skin, although the
specific compound(s) responsible remain undetermined (Burrows and Tyrl, 2001).