Kewa acida is an
annual or short-lived
perennial, growing up to tall by about wide. It has a spreading, bush-like habit, with stems that may be woody at the base. The succulent leaves are narrow, usually long by wide, but occasionally longer, and are smooth, with a bluish-grey waxy coat. The
inflorescence is a false
umbel with two to seven flowers, each on a stem (
pedicel) up to long. The white flowers are about across. The flower has five
tepals arranged in a single whorl. Characteristic of the genus
Kewa, the outer two appear to be
sepals, being green; one appears to be half sepal and half
petal; and the inner two appear to be petals, being white with a green stripe on the back. The
stamens are arranged in two whorls: ten paired in one whorl alternating with five single in the other. The
ovary is superior (visible inside the tepals). The fruit is yellowish-brown,
dehiscent, containing small black seeds. ==Taxonomy==