Whorled Pennyroyal

Hydrocotyle verticillata Thunb.

Araliaceae

Location in our garden

Aquatic

Synonym

Centella homalocarpa Drude 

Centella verticillata (Thunb.) Fourc. 

Hydrocotyle ambigua Britton, Sterns & Poggenb. 

Habitus

Aquatic. A perennial, glabrous, succulent prostate herb, 10–15 cm long

Part Used

  • The Whole Plant

Growing Requirements

  • Full Sunshine

Habitat

  • Aquatic

Overview

It is native to North and South America, and is distributed from Massachusetts and South California in the USA to central Chile, Paraguay and Northern Argentina. The generic name is derived from the Greek hydro, water, and kotyle, small cup, probably referring to the watery habitat and peltate leaves of certain species. The specific epithet is derived from the Latin verticillatus, meaning whorled, probably referring to the inflorescence.

Vernacular Names

Mangkok (Tagalog-Philippines), Xiang gu cao (Chinese), Gewöhnlicher wassernabel (German), Sombrerillo de agua (Spanish), Spikblad (Swedish), Rau ma la sen (Vietnamese), Lus na pingine (Irish).

Agroecology

It is common in wet places such as pond and stream margins, nutrient-rich pools, irrigation and drainage canals, seeps, and muddy sites from sea level to 1,600 m. This plant grows well in marshy and acidic soil.

Morphology

  • Rooting - at the nodes with long stolon
  • Stems - slender, creeping.
  • Leaves - long and slender petioles, glossy, dark green, crenate, peltate to orbicular, 6 to 9 veined, up to 4 cm across.
  • Inflorescence - 5–25 cm long arising from the axil of the leaves.
  • Flowers - white, tinged with pink to purplish green, 1 mm, subsessile, 3 to 6 in a simple head-like umbel, 3 mm across, sometimes with 1 to 3 whorls of flowers below.

Cultivation

Propagated by cuttings and seeds.

Chemical Constituents

Saponins, flavonoids, steroids, tannins, terpenoids, sterols, triterpenes, glycosides, β-carotene, essential oils (β-farnesen, β cubebene, y-muurolene, β-bisabolene.

Traditional Medicinal Uses

Medicinal Uses

  • Studies have shown cytotoxic and phytoremediative properties.
  • Considered vulnerary. It is used for eczema and other dermatologic maladies such as scrofula, ulcers.
  • Also used for rheumatism, headaches, dizziness, bloody stools.

Traditional Uses

  • In Samar, it is used for diarrhea.
  • Leaves are used to dress burns or applied to skin diseases.
  • In Malaya, traditionally used for treating wounds and as a diuretic.
  • In Danish folk medicine, used for whooping cough.
  • In India, it is used for treatment of leprosy.
  • The poultice is used for the treatment of wounds and boils.
  • The decoction of the plant is used for the treatment of abscesses, colds, coughs, hepatitis, influenza, purities, and sore throat.

Part Used

Reference Sources