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Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog

The wonder of plants and fungi.

Jeremy Bartlett's Let It Grow Blog
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"People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us." - Iris Murdoch

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Sea Pea, Lathyrus japonicus

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 17 August, 2017 by Jeremy Bartlett18 March, 2018
Sea Pea, Lathyrus japonicus

Sea Pea, Lathyrus japonicus, at Shingle Street (29th July 2017).

Last month we were given a lift to Shingle Street in Suffolk, a tiny hamlet at the mouth of the River Ore. It must be bleak in winter, but on a sunny day at the end of July it was a lovely place to visit. We saw several species of butterflies, including a couple of Clouded Yellows that swept past on a south-westerly wind. Most impressive, apart from the sheer amount of sky and fresh air, were the plants. These included big clumps of Sea Kale, Crambe maritima, and large patches of Sea Pea, Lathyrus japonicus.

Sea Pea, Lathyrus japonicus, is a a member of the Pea family (Fabaceae). It is long-lived perennial herb that grows on shingle beaches and, occasionally, blown sand, where it is one of the first plants to colonise. Good places to see it include Shingle Street and Orfordness in Suffolk and Rye Harbour in Sussex. It is usually in flower from late May until late July. The flowers are followed by seed pods, green at first, ripening to dark brown. By late summer the plants start to die back, leaving dry stems without leaves, which can persist through early winter. Stems show above the ground again from April.

Sea Pea is a very distinctive plant. Its trailing stems grow up to 50 to 80 centimetres (cm) long and bear waxy, glaucous green pinnate leaves, five to ten cm long, with two to five pairs of leaflets. The terminal leaflet is often replaced by a twining tendril. The large flowers are produced by plants that are three or more years old. They have a dark purple standard petal and paler purple wing and keel petals. They are produced in racemes of up to twelve flowers. There are some lovely photos on the NatureGate and Seasonal Wild Flowers websites. The flowers are pollinated by long-tongued bumblebees such as Bombus pascuorum, B. hortorum and B. lapidarius.

Bombus pascuorum on Sea Pea flowers.

Bombus pascuorum (Common Carder-bee) on Sea Pea flowers.

Sea Pea’s stronghold in the British Isles is East Anglia but there are isolated colonies in Angus on the east coast of Scotland and even on Unst in Shetland (see map). It is classified as being of “Least Concern” in the Vascular Plant Red Data List for Great Britain. R.E. Randall has written about its past and present status and distribution in the British Isles in in Watsonia vol. 11, pp 247 – 251 (1977).

Lathyrus japonicus is also found on the coasts of Denmark and Norway and, in Sweden and Finland, on coasts by the Baltic Sea, the Gulf of Finland, Gulf of Bothnia and beside Lakes Ladoga and Oneda in Russia. It also grows in parts of Greenland and Iceland, in Eastern Siberia through Kamchatka to Japan (on sand dunes) and on the western coast of North America from northern California to Alaska and on the east coat from Newfoundland to Long Island, the lower St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes (see p28 of “Shingle Biodiversity and Habitat Distrurbance” by E. J. Low). It is now extinct in northern France.

Lathyrus japonicus is a tough plant, especially once it is fully grown. Although seedlings are susceptible to drought, both mature plants and seedlings are frost resistant. A covering of 15 cm of shingle can kill younger plants, but older ones can produce axillary shoots on their stems, which can grow almost vertically up through as much as 40 cm of blown sand (Low p31). Mature plants can also regenerate from short sections of rhizome after storms. The seeds are light and buoyant and are viable for at least five years, meaning that they can be dispersed on the tides. Visitor pressure may be one of the biggest threats to the plant – repeated human footfall can damage the plant – but at Shingle Street it seems to be thriving.

Stock Doves and Wood Pigeons sometimes eat Sea Pea seeds and may help to disperse them – this probably accounts for a big increase in the plant at Rye Harbour in the 1960s. Sea Pea is also one of the foodplants of the micro moth Pima boisduvaliella, which flies on warm summer evenings. The weevil Bruchus loti emerged from seeds collected at Rye Harbour in 2003 (Low p32).

Sea Pea seeds have been eaten by humans, especially in times of famine, including at Aldeburgh in Suffolk.The Plants for a Future website says that the seeds are said to be safe and very nutritious in small quantities, but should not comprise more than 30% of the diet. The note of caution is well advised. The seeds contain the neurotoxin oxalyldiaminopropionic acid (ODAP), which can cause lathyrism, a condition involving degenerative changes to the spinal cord, leading to paralysis and lack of strength in or the inability to move the lower limbs.

Lathyrism is more usually associated with the Grass Pea, Lathyrus sativus, a tasty and nutritious crop grown for food for humans and livestock in East Africa and parts of Asia. Advice from Kew Gardens is that Grass Pea is “harmless to humans in small quantities” but it should not be eaten in larger amounts over an extended period of time. Some Western Asian varieties of Grass Pea have been bred to contain lower amounts of ODAP, but the chemical is thought to be of benefit to the plant, helping it cope with drought and waterlogging.

It is because of Sea Pea’s fairly restricted distribution and the slight risk of lathyrism from eating the seeds that I have included it in the “Ornamental” rather than “Edible” category on my blog.

Update 18th March 2018:

When we visited Shingle Street, we noticed the line of shells on the beach. I  have just discovered why they are there: “Shingle Street shell line inspired by friends’ cancer treatment“.

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged Lathyrus japonicus, Sea Pea

Dark-red Helleborine, Epipactis atrorubens

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 19 July, 2017 by Jeremy Bartlett29 January, 2018
Dark-red Helleborine, Epipactis atrorubens

Dark-red Helleborine, Epipactis atrorubens at Gait Barrows.

In late June we visited Gait Barrows National Nature Reserve in Lancashire (download a leaflet about the reserve). We were too late to see flowers on the reintroduced Lady’s Slipper Orchids (Cypripedium calceolus) on the reserve, but we had timed our visit perfectly for the Dark-red Helleborine, Epipactis atrorubens. Like the Lady’s Slipper, it is a member of the family Orchidaceae, which has well over 25,000 species worldwide. There are 56 native species in the UK.

In the British Isles, the Dark-red Helleborine is restricted to parts of the north of England, the Great Orme in Wales, the central and north-west Highlands of Scotland and the west of Ireland, including The Burren. It grows in rocky, limestone places such as cliffs, scree slopes and limestone pavements like those at Gait Barrows. Its most southerly colonies in England are in Derbyshire.

The plant is listed in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species in the category “least concern”. In the British Isles, its overall distribution is stable and the number of known sites has increased in recent years, although the orchid can grazed by deer and rabbits – we found several plants with a nipped off flower spike. Quarrying can destroy its habitat, though fortunately areas like Gait Barrows are now protected from removal of rocks to make rockeries. The Online Atlas of the British and Irish flora has a map of the current distribution in the British Isles. Further afield, Dark-red Helleborines occur from the subarctic (including Finland) in the north to the Mediterranean region and eastwards to parts of Western Siberia. They are also naturalised in the United States, in one part of Vermont.

The orchid has beautiful, blood-red flowers and these look lovely against the grey-white of limestone. We were so pleased to find our first flower, then more and more. At Gait Barrows they seem to cluster in particular areas and other bits of limestone pavement have none. The plants are often near trees, albeit stunted ones, such as Ash trees that creep through the grykes (fissures) in the limestone pavement, rather than towering overhead as forest giants.

In his superb “A Pocket Guide To The Orchids of Britain and Ireland“, which I highly recommend, Simon Harrap relates how studies in continental Europe suggest that the Dark-red Helleborine is associated with ectomycorrhizal fungi. Often the orchids may gain nutrients from the roots of nearby trees via these fungi, and isotope studies have shown that the orchid takes around 65% of its nitrogen and 15% of its carbon from fungi.

There are some excellent photos of Dark-red Helleborine on the Wildflower finder website. In the meantime, I leave you with a photograph of the Dark-red Helleborine’s habitat at Gait Barrows.

Gait Barrows

A general view of Gait Barrows.

Posted in General, Ornamental | Tagged Dark-red Helleborine, Epipactis atrorubens

Weasel’s-Snout, Misopates orontium

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 17 June, 2017 by Jeremy Bartlett1 November, 2018

I have written in previous posts about some of the wild flowers / weeds on our allotment such as Gallant Soldier (spreads like wildfire but is good in chicken stew), Red Deadnettle (lovely spring flowers for bees) and Tree Spinach (a useful edible and self-inflicted weed).

But one of my favourite allotment wild flowers (I hesitate to use the word “weed”) is Weasel’s-Snout, Misopates orontium.

Weasel's-Snout, Misopates orontium

Weasel’s-Snout, Misopates orontium, on the allotment.

Weasel’s-Snout is also known as Lesser Snapdragon and Calf’s Snout. It is a member of the family Plantaginaceae and is a close relative of the Snapdragon, Antirrhinum majus, which was the subject of my PhD thesis many years ago and the reason why I came to Norwich. Weasel’s-Snout’s pretty pink flowers and green hairy fruit look just like a miniature version of Antirrhinum majus.

Misopates orontium is an ancient introduction to the British Isles, and is classed as an archaeophyte – plants that were introduced here before 1500 – along with Cornflower, Corn Marigold and Common Poppy. It is a spring-germinating annual of light soils and can be found in arable and other cultivated ground. Like other cornfield annuals, however, its fortunes have declined (see map) as agriculture has intensified and autumn sown crops (such as winter wheat and oilseed rape) have become widespread. Outside the British Isles, Weasel’s-Snout can still be found in the Mediterranean region (its original home) and, as a more recently introduced plant, in North America. In warmer climates, Misopates orontium flowers as early as March but here in Norwich it appears from April and May and flowers from June until September.

I take a pretty tolerant approach to my Weasel’s-Snout. If it is growing in the middle of a row of seedlings I will remove it, but I let it grow between rows or on the edges of the plot, where it is a pleasure, not a nuisance. The seeds are easy to collect and I have passed it on to friends, including Anne and Simon Harrap at Natural Surroundings in North Norfolk, who have included the plant in their displays of cornfield annuals.

If you want to grow Misopates orontium, but aren’t lucky enough to have your own supply, you can also buy seeds from Emorsgate Seeds.

Posted in Ornamental | Tagged Misopates orontium, Weasel's-Snout

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Thirty latest posts

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