Blutaparon vermiculare var. aggregatum(Willd.) Mears (1982)
Blutaparon vermiculare var. longispicatum(Moq.) Mears (1982)
Caraxeron vermicularis(L.) Raf. (1837)
Celosia maritimaSalzm. ex Moq. (1849)
Cruzeta crassifolia(Kunth) M.Gómez (1896)
Cruzeta vermicularis(L.) M.Gómez (1896)
Gomphrena aggregataWilld. (1809)
Gomphrena albifloraMoq. (1849)
Gomphrena crassifolia(Kunth) Spreng. (1824)
Illecebrum vermiculatum(L.) L. (1762)
Iresine aggregata(Willd.) Moq. (1849)
Iresine crassifoliaMoq. (1849)
Iresine surinamensisMoq. (1849)
Iresine vermicularis(L.) Moq. (1849)
Iresine vermicularis var. aggregata(Willd.) Seub. (1875)
Iresine vermicularis var. longispicataMoq. (1849)
Iresine vermicularis var. microcephalaMoq. (1849)
Lithophila vermicularis(L.) Uline (1900)
Philoxerus aggregatus(Willd.) Kunth (1818)
Philoxerus crassifoliusKunth (1818)
Philoxerus litoralisSuess. (1935)
Philoxerus surinamensisMiq. ex Moq. (1849), not validly publ.
Philoxerus vermicularis(L.) Sm. (1814)
Philoxerus vermicularis var. aggregatus(Willd.) Ridl. (1890)
Philoxerus vermicularis var. microcephalusA.St.-Hil. (1833)
Xeraea albiflora(Moq.) Kuntze (1891)
Gomphrena vermicularis, with
common namessilverhead,[2]silverweed, saltweed, and samphire, is a species of
plant in the family
Amaranthaceae, native to the Americas from the southeastern United States to Mexico,
Central America, the Caribbean, northern South America, and Brazil, and to western and central tropical Africa from Mauritania to Angola.[1] It has edible stems and leaves.[3]
^USDA, NRCS (n.d.).
"Blutaparon vermiculare". The PLANTS Database (plants.usda.gov). Greensboro, North Carolina: National Plant Data Team. Retrieved 4 February 2016.