Acaena

Acaena is a genus of about 60 species of mainly evergreen, creeping herbaceous perennial plants and subshrubs in the family Rosaceae, native mainly to the Southern Hemisphere, notably New Zealand, Australia and South America, but with a few species extending into the Northern Hemisphere, north to Hawaii (A. exigua) and California (A. pinnatifida).

The leaves are alternate, 4 - 15 cm long, and pinnate or nearly so, with 7–21 leaflets. The flowers are produced in a tight globose [inflorescence] 1 - 2 cm in diameter, with no petals. The fruit is also a dense ball of many seeds; in many (but not all) species the seeds bear a barbed arrowhead point, the seedhead forming a burr which attaches itself to animal fur or feathers for dispersal.

Several Acaena species in New Zealand are known by the common name bidibid. The word is written variously bidi-bidi, biddy-biddy, biddi-biddi, biddi-bid and a number of other variations. These names are the English rendition of the original Māori name of piripiri. The plant is also called the New Zealand burr. The species Acaena microphylla has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.

Etymology
The generic name Acaena is derived from the Greek "akaina" (thorn), referring to the spiny hypanthium.

Species
, Plants of the World Online accepted the following species:


 * Acaena agnipila
 * Acaena alpina
 * Acaena anserinifolia
 * Acaena antarctica
 * Acaena argentea
 * Acaena boliviana
 * Acaena buchananii
 * Acaena caesiiglauca – glaucous pirri-pirri-bur
 * Acaena caespitosa
 * Acaena confertissima
 * Acaena cylindristachya
 * Acaena dumicola (South Island of New Zealand)
 * Acaena echinata – sheep's burr
 * Acaena elongata
 * Acaena emittens (North Island of New Zealand)
 * Acaena eupatoria
 * Acaena exigua – liliwai (Hawaii)
 * Acaena fissistipula
 * Acaena fuscescens
 * Acaena glabra
 * Acaena hirsutula
 * Acaena inermis
 * Acaena integerrima
 * Acaena juvenca (New Zealand)
 * Acaena latebrosa
 * Acaena leptacantha
 * Acaena longiscapa
 * Acaena lucida
 * Acaena macrocephala
 * Acaena magellanica – greater burnet
 * Acaena masafuerana
 * Acaena microphylla – New Zealand-bur
 * Acaena minor
 * Acaena montana
 * Acaena myriophylla
 * Acaena novae-zelandiae – red bidibid (New Zealand)
 * Acaena ovalifolia
 * Acaena ovina
 * Acaena pallida – sand bidibid
 * Acaena patagonica
 * Acaena pinnatifida – Argentinian biddy-biddy
 * Acaena platyacantha
 * Acaena poeppigiana
 * Acaena profundeincisa
 * Acaena pumila
 * Acaena rorida (North Island)
 * Acaena saccaticupula
 * Acaena sarmentosa
 * Acaena sericea
 * Acaena splendens
 * Acaena stangii
 * Acaena stricta
 * Acaena subincisa
 * Acaena tenera – lesser burnet
 * Acaena tesca (South Island)
 * Acaena torilicarpa
 * Acaena trifida

Invasive species
Some species have been introduced accidentally to other areas, attached to sheep's wool, and have become invasive species. Acaena novae-zelandiae, one of the bidibids from New Zealand, is the most commonly encountered species in the United Kingdom, where it is often abundant on coastal sand dunes, crowding out native vegetation and creating an often painful nuisance with the barbed burrs. In California, A. pallida, A. novae-zelandiae and A. anserinifolia are considered serious weeds.