The species can be a weed for tropical crops, particularly when fields are hand-cultivated. Crops it tends to affect are corn, coconuts, tomatoes, cotton, coffee, bananas, soybeans, papaya, and sugar cane. Dry thickets may become a fire hazard. In addition,
Mimosa pudica can change the physico-chemical properties of the soil it invades; total nitrogen and potassium, for example, have been seen to increase in significantly invaded areas.
Phytoremediation Thirty-six native Thai plant species were tested to see which conducted the most
phytoremediation of arsenic-polluted soils caused by tin mines.
Mimosa pudica was one of the four species that significantly extracted and
bioaccumulated the pollutant into its leaves. Other studies have found that
Mimosa pudica extracts heavy metals such as copper, lead, tin, and zinc from polluted soils. This allows for the soil to gradually return to less toxic compositions.
Nitrogen fixation If
nitrogen-fixing bacteria are present in the environment,
Mimosa pudica may form root nodules for them to inhabit. These bacteria are able to convert atmospheric nitrogen, which plants cannot use, into a form that plants can use. This trait is common among plants in the family
Fabaceae. Nitrogen is a vital element for both plant growth and reproduction and also essential for photosynthesis because it is a component of
chlorophyll. Nitrogen fixation contributes nitrogen to the plant and to the soil surrounding the plant's roots. As much as 60% of the nitrogen found in
Mimosa pudica can be attributed to the fixation of N2 by bacteria.
Burkholderia phymatum STM815T and
Cupriavidus taiwanensis LMG19424T are beta-rhizobial strains of diazotrophs that are highly effective at fixing nitrogen when coupled with
M. pudica.
Burkholderia is also shown to be a strong symbiont of
Mimosa pudica in nitrogen-poor soils in regions like Cerrado and Caatinga. ==Cultivation==