The plant is a short-lived perennial herb producing erect, fleshy stems from the top of its
taproot. The stems grow up to 20 centimeters tall. The leaves are alternately arranged and overlapping, with a number of small leaves in the axil of one larger leaf. They are linear to
spatula-shaped and about a centimeter long. The top of each stem is occupied by a short
inflorescence of flowers. The most obvious is the chasmogamous type borne in the inflorescence on the stem. These are each half a centimeter long with pink winglike
sepals and three smaller tufted pink petals at the center. The second type of flower is
cleistogamous and borne at the base of the plant. These do not open, but
self-pollinate. These flowers, which occur at the leaf axils, are rare. The third type of flower is a cleistogamous, unopening type that remains underground. They are white in color, and also self-pollinate. The very uncommon mode of reproduction characterized by aboveground chasmogamous flowers and belowground cleistogamous flowers is called
amphicarpy and it is known from fewer than 100 plant species. The different types of flowers may occur at different times of the year. The aboveground flowers depend on insect
pollinators for successful reproduction, as evidenced by the low fruit production of flowers in a pollinator-exclusion experiment. Pollinators include
bee-flies,
flower flies, and
leaf-cutter bees. The fruit is a capsule containing cylindrical seeds each about 0.3 centimeters long. The seeds have hairs which attract ants, which then collect and
disperse them. The most common type of seed-collecting ant is
Pheidole morrissii and others include
Paratrichina arenavaga and
P. phantasma. ==Distribution==