Acroglochin persicarioides is an erect glabrous annual herb, 30–80 cm tall. The sparsely branched stems are ribbed and striate, green or purplish. The alternateleaves are long petiolate, their simple leafblades are ovate to deltoid with irregularly and coarsely toothed margins. The inflorescences are numerous branched cymes in the axils of almost all leaves, erect-spreading, contracted, with short sterile branches ending needle-like. The hermaphrodite flowers are sessile, without bracts and bracteoles. The perianth is very small and consists of five basally connate tepals, these are linear-oblong, curved upwards, with a green center and membranous margins. There are one to three stamens and an ovary with short style and two short stigmas. The fruit is slightly shorter than the adpressed persistent perianth, and about 1–4 mm in diameter, it is disciform, depressed and saucer-shaped and opens circumscissile. The fruit wall is free. The horizontal seed is black, with a hard, thin, glossy seed coat. It contains an annular embryo and mealy perisperm. The flowering and fruiting phase reaches from July to November.
Distribution and habitat
Acroglochin persicarioides is distributed from the Himalayas, Kashmir, Nepal, Bhutan, and Tibet to China The plants grow in disturbed vegetation among rocks, on waste grounds, near cultivations, at forest margins, riversides, open hillsides, or at roadsides.
Systematics
The genus Acroglochin was first established in 1822 by Heinrich Schrader, at the same time describing the single type species, Acroglochin chenopodioides. In the following years, several species of other genera were regarded as identical, especially Amaranthus persicarioides, which was already described in 1810, so that this name has priority. Alfred Moquin-Tandon published the combination Acroglochin persicarioides in 1849 as the accepted name for this species. Synonyms of Acroglochin are Lecanocarpus Nees and Blitanthus Rchb.. Synonyms of Acroglochin persicarioides are:
Acroglochin chenopodioides Schrad. ex J.A. Schultes
Acroglochin persicarioides var. muliensis T.P. Soong
Acroglochin persicarioides var. multiflora T P. Soong
Acroglochin obtusifolia C.H.Blom
Acroglochin schraderiana Schult.f. ex Moq.
Amaranthus acroglochin Spreng.
Amaranthus diandrus Spreng.
Amaranthus cauliflorus Link
Amaranthus persicarioides Poir.
Blitanthus nepalensis Rchb.
Boehmeria amaranthus H.Lév.
Lecanocarpus cauliflorus Nees, T. Nees & Sinning
Lecanocarpus nepalensis Nees
Acroglochin'' was usually classified in subfamily Betoideae, because like all other Betoideae, the fruits are circumscissile capsules. But it proved to be phylogeneticallyisolated. The relationships are yet uncertain, it may probably be classified as a subfamily of its own. Recent molecular research provides some evidence for the inclusion in subfamily Corispermoideae: