A less-known relative of Mistletoe
Back in 2015 I wrote about Mistletoe, Viscum album. It’s a well known plant associated with midwinter celebrations and the subject of stories and folklore. But it has a much lesser known, smaller cousin that grows in the British Isles, Bastard-toadflax, Thesium humifusum.
Mistletoe and Bastard-toadflax are the two members of the Santalaceae, the Sandalwood family, found in the British Isles.
Mistletoe grows on our allotment site but Bastard-toadflax prefers heavily grazed calcareous grassland so is an hour-and-a-half’s train ride away, near Royston in Hertfordshire. Last week Vanna and I went to see it.
We walked across the golf course, encountering Marbled White, Chalkhill Blue and Dark-green Fritillary butterflies, to the chalk hillside where we sometimes go in spring to see Pasque Flowers, Pulsatilla vulgaris. Last time we visited Vanna had found an interesting shieldbug and she subsequently identified it as a Down Shieldbug, Canthophorus impressus, which feeds on Bastard-toadflax (note 1).
We decided to go back and look for the Down Shieldbug’s foodplant.

Down Shieldbug, Canthophorus impressus. Both adults and the black and red nymphs feed on Bastard-toadflax. (July 2026.)
Searching for Bastard-toadflax
You need to know what to look for when searching for Bastard-toadflax.
Bastard-toadflax is a small and low growing perennial plant. It has strap-shaped leaves with a leaves of a similar shape (long and thin) to true toadflaxes, members of the Plantaginaceae, the plantain family (note 2). But its flowers are very different: Bastard-toadflax doesn’t have the spurred flowers of true toadflaxes.
After a bit of searching but I eventually found some Bastard-toadflax at Royston and, once we’d noticed that its yellow-green leaves stood out from other vegetation we were able to spot other patches of the plant as it sprawled across the ground amongst other short vegetation. Vanna also found another Down Shieldbug.
Thesium humifusum could never be described as spectacular but it is very attractive nonetheless, with flowers with their white tepals, shaped like stars, fitting the plant’s alternative English name of “Stars in the Grass” (note 3).
All members of the Santalaceae are hemi-parasites. They have green leaves and manufactures their own sugars by photosynthesis but absorb nutrients and water from their host via a specialised structure called a haustorium (plural haustoria).
The family includes the White or Indian Sandalwood tree, Santalum album, which a native of Indonesia, the Philippines and Western Australia, used as a source of timber for woodworking (until most of the larger trees were cut down) and for sandalwood oil. Although it grows as a small tree its flowers and leaves (illustrated on Wikipedia) remind me of Mistletoe and Bastard-toadflax.
Thesium humifusum is hemi-parasitic on the roots of various herbs, including Hedge Bedstraw (Galium album) and Lady’s Bedstraw (Galium verum) (note 4). it is a perennial herb, with prostrate herbaceous shoots that grow from a woody rootstock.
Distribution
In the British Isles, Bastard-toadflax is found in short, usually heavily grazed, species-rich calcareous grassland, chiefly on chalk, less frequently on limestone, and rarely on clays or calcareous sandy soils near the coast. It is found in the Channel Islands and in mainland England but is absent from Scotland, Ireland and Wales.
It has been lost from many former sites. In Somerset in the nineteenth century it was found at Claverton Down and Hampton Down near Bath, but these sites are now occupied by the University of Bath and Bath Golf Club. Other losses occurred when downland was ploughed or treated with fertiliser or when scrub encroached on grassland. The plant is now absent in many grid squares where it occurred before 1930 and even nowadays there is still an ongoing decline.

Distribution map for Bastard-toadflax, Thesium humifusum, from BSBI Online Plant Atlas 2020.
Outside the British Isles, Thesium humifusum occurs in Belgium, France, the Netherlands and Spain. It is very scarce in the Netherlands and confined to one or two sand dunes.
More Pictures
If you want to find your own Bastard-toadflax there are some good photographs of the plant on the Wild Flower Finder website. Mike Crewe’s Flora of East Anglia also features the plant and the UK Wildflowers website has photos of the plant on the Devil’s Dyke near Newmarket.
Bastard-toadflax was the Sussex Biodiversity Record Centre’s species of the month in August 2019.
Finally, a couple more of my photographs from near Royston:
Notes
Note 1 – According to Richard Jones (“Shieldbugs”, William Collins, 2023) Down Shieldbug, Canthophorus impressus, feeds on Bastard-toadflax (Thesium humifusum) in the British Isles and its relative Thesium alpinum in mountains of Europe.
Thesium alpinum is now considered to be a synonym of Thesium bavarum. (“A tough nutlet to crack: resolving the phylogeny of Thesium (Thesiaceae), the largest genus in Santalales.“)
Canthophorus impressus is also known as the Bastard-toadflax Bug.
See “Bastard Toadflax bug at Hartslock“. Hartslock Nature Reserve is located on the north side of the Thames between Whitchurch and Goring-on-Thames, Oxfordshire. The site is owned by The Wildlife Trust for Berks, Bucks & Oxon (BBOWT).
If you find a powdery mildew on Thesium humifusum it will be Erysiphe thesii. So far it has only been recorded from Hartslock.
Note 2 – But not all toadflaxes. The leaves are thin like those of Common Toadflax, Linaria vulgaris but very different from those of Ivy-leaved Toadflax, Cymbalaria muralis.
Note 3 – The English name is sometimes spelt without the hyphen (“Bastard Toadflax”).
Note 4 – Wikipedia says “Thesium humifusum is a hemiparasitic plant that steals nutrients from hedge bedstraw (Galium album) or lady’s bedstraw (Galium verum).” The reference is from the FLORON Distribution Atlas Vascular Plants (of the Netherlands). Both species were growing where we found our Bastard-toadflax plants.


























