Striga gesnerioides aka Tobacco Witchweed

Taxonomy ID: 3827

Striga gesnerioides, commonly known as cowpea witchweed, purple witchweed, or tobacco witchweed, is an obligate root holoparasite in the family Orobanchaceae (order Lamiales). Unlike most witchweeds that target grasses, this species parasitizes legumes — principally cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) — as well as members of the Convolvulaceae and Euphorbiaceae families.

The plant is an annual herb (occasionally perennial) that grows erect to about 35 cm tall and typically branches from the base. It possesses a single large tuberous primary haustorium (1–3 cm in diameter) that attaches to host roots and extracts water and nutrients through specialized finger-like structures called oscula. Because it has very limited photosynthetic capacity, it depends almost entirely on its host for nutrition during early development. The plant spends 4–7 weeks developing underground before emerging rapidly to flower and set seed.

Each plant produces between 90,000 and 500,000 tiny, dust-like seeds that can remain viable in the soil for more than a decade. Germination is triggered by strigolactones — chemical signals released by host root exudates — and is optimal at soil temperatures of 30–40°C. No germination occurs below 15°C or above 45°C.

Native to tropical Africa, Indian Ocean Islands, the Arabian Peninsula, and tropical Asia, S. gesnerioides is distributed across more than 30 sub-Saharan African countries, with additional presence in Saudi Arabia, Yemen, India, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, and Australia. It has been introduced to the Americas, including Florida (USA) and Guyana. In sub-Saharan Africa, the Striga genus broadly affects 40 million hectares of arable land, causing losses estimated at up to $13 billion annually. At least seven distinct biological races of S. gesnerioides are recognized, differing in their virulence on cowpea varieties.

The species favors light, sandy soils in open grassland, savanna, and rocky hillside habitats and is drought-tolerant. It has no known edible uses. Ethnobotanically, the powdered plant has been applied to wounds and skin complaints, stem ash used as toothbrush fiber, sap employed as a blue-black dye, and flower pigment used in painting. Scientific research has identified flavones (apigenin and luteolin) with anti-inflammatory properties and noted antifertility and antihistaminic activity in plant extracts.

Common names

Tobacco Witchweed, Indigo Witchweed, Cowpea Witchweed

More information about Tobacco Witchweed

Where does Tobacco Witchweed come from?

Striga gesnerioides is native to tropical Africa (present across more than 30 sub-Saharan countries), Indian Ocean Islands, the Arabian Peninsula (Saudi Arabia, Yemen), and tropical Asia (India, Sri Lanka, Cambodia). It has been accidentally introduced to Florida (USA), Guyana, and is also recorded as widespread in Australia.

Can Tobacco Witchweed be grown outdoors?

In the wild, S. gesnerioides grows outdoors in tropical and subtropical regions of Africa, Asia, and Australia, in open grasslands and savannas. In the USA it is a regulated invasive agricultural pest, present in Florida. It cannot be deliberately cultivated as it requires a living legume host root to survive.

Are there different varieties of Tobacco Witchweed?

At least seven distinct biological races of Striga gesnerioides are recognized, each differing in virulence on cowpea (Vigna unguiculata) varieties. Research has established gene-for-gene resistance interactions between specific parasite races and cowpea resistance genes.

How does Tobacco Witchweed propagate?

S. gesnerioides propagates exclusively by seed. Seeds are tiny (dust-like) and produced in enormous quantities (90,000–500,000 per plant). Germination requires the presence of strigolactones exuded from host roots. After germination, the seedling rapidly forms haustoria that penetrate host root cells and establish xylem connections within 48–72 hours. Seeds disperse via wind, water, animal vectors, and human activity (machinery, tools, clothing).

What pests and diseases affect Tobacco Witchweed?

Striga gesnerioides is itself one of the most damaging agricultural pests in sub-Saharan Africa, recognized as a principal biotic constraint on cowpea production. It also parasitizes other legumes and members of Convolvulaceae and Euphorbiaceae. Crop yields can be reduced by over 50% in monoculture situations. At least seven virulent races have been documented. Management strategies include resistant crop varieties, trap cropping, push-pull intercropping, and herbicide-coated seeds.

How difficult is Tobacco Witchweed to care for?

Striga gesnerioides cannot be cultivated as a garden or houseplant — it is an obligate root parasite that can only survive attached to a living host plant (primarily legumes such as cowpea). Its life cycle is entirely dependent on host root exudates for germination and continued growth, making conventional cultivation impossible. It is exclusively encountered as an agricultural pest.

How big does Tobacco Witchweed grow?

Fast

Plants grow to a maximum height of about 35 cm (roughly 14 inches). After germination, the parasite spends 4–7 weeks developing underground before rapid above-ground emergence. Each plant produces 90,000–500,000 seeds that remain viable in soil for over 10 years, enabling persistent soil seed banks.

What temperature does Tobacco Witchweed prefer?

Germination requires soil temperatures of 30–40°C (86–104°F); no germination occurs below 15°C or above 45°C. Above-ground growth ceases below approximately 20°C. Seeds, however, can survive frozen soil as low as −15°C (5°F).

What do Tobacco Witchweed flowers look like?

Flowers are small and brightly colored (pink to purple), characteristic of the Orobanchaceae family. The flowers yield a pink pigment historically used in traditional painting. The plant is self-fertile.

How is Tobacco Witchweed pollinated?

🐝 Self pollinating

Striga gesnerioides is self-fertile (self-pollinating). It produces an enormous number of small seeds — up to 500,000 per plant — that disperse readily via wind, water, animal vectors, and especially human activity through contaminated machinery, tools, and clothing.

How often should Tobacco Witchweed be watered?

💧 Dry

As a root parasite of dry-land crops, S. gesnerioides is drought-tolerant and grows in habitats receiving as little as 250 mm of annual rainfall (up to 1,500 mm). It does not require supplemental watering and is best adapted to seasonally dry tropical conditions.

What kind of soil does Tobacco Witchweed need?

Light sandy

Striga gesnerioides prefers light, sandy soils in open grasslands, savannas, and rocky hillsides. It does not thrive in heavy or waterlogged soils. Seed germination in soil is temperature-dependent, requiring 30–40°C for optimal results.

What lighting does Tobacco Witchweed need?

This species grows in fully exposed, open environments — grasslands, savannas, and rocky hills under full, direct sun. It is not shade-tolerant.

Is Tobacco Witchweed edible?

No edible parts are documented for Striga gesnerioides. It is not used as a food plant by humans or animals.

Does Tobacco Witchweed have medicinal uses?

💊 Rating 2/5

Ethnobotanically, the powdered plant has been sprinkled on wounds to assist healing, mixed with fat and applied topically for swollen neck glands, and applied as a fresh tuber paste to treat swollen testes. Scientific studies have documented antifertility activity in ethanolic extracts, antihistaminic and mast cell stabilizing properties, and the presence of flavones apigenin and luteolin with anti-inflammatory and antispasmodic effects. However, no formal clinical trials or approved therapeutic uses exist.

What other uses does Tobacco Witchweed have?

🔧 Rating 2/5

The plant has several traditional non-food uses: sap is used to produce a blue-black dye for skins; root sap creates indigo blue coloring; flowers yield a pink pigment used for painting; and the stem has been used as a toothbrush. These uses are documented in African ethnobotanical literature.

Is Tobacco Witchweed toxic to humans/pets?

There is no verified data on the toxicity of this plant in the records of Ploi. If any person, including yourself, a family member, or a pet, consume plant material with an uncertain toxicity level, it is advisable to seek the advice of a healthcare expert.

More info:
Wikipedia GBIF

Sources

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