Showing posts with label Goosegrass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goosegrass. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Inner beauty of a successful weed


Hedgerows are full of young goosegrass Galium aparine plants at the moment, whose rapid growth has been encouraged by mild winter temperatures. 

























This is one of our most successful and ubiquitous weeds, beautifully adapted to fast growth, prolific seed production and efficient seed dispersal.

The seeds, which are covered in tiny hooks and are dispersed in the fur and feathers of animals, germinate in late autumn and early winter so that by spring the young plants have a head start on surrounding vegetation and begin to flower quickly.


The stems elongate very quickly too and the plant is finely adapted to using surrounding plants for support, thanks to ....



... a covering of tiny, backward-facing hooks on the stems and leaves, seen here under the microscope. In fertile agricultural soils the plant can thread its way through a hedge by early summer, sometimes reaching a length of six feet or more and smothering the hedge by the end of summer, all the while producing thousands of hooked seeds from tiny white flowers that are visited by small insects but probably self-pollinate too.

One reason why goosegrass is such a prolific seed producer is that its habit of scrambling over other plants, using those hooks, means that it doesn't need to invest much energy to producing a strong stem. It takes a hawthorn several years to reach a height of six feet, building stem strength through woody tissue production, but goosegrass can reach the same height in about three months.



 This image shows a one cell-thick section through a stem and those yellow stained cells, in a ring in the centre, are the only ones that have any woody strengthening in their cell walls - all the blue-stained cells are pure cellulose. 

The narrow line of yellow staining on the outside of the stem is the waxy cuticle, that protects the plant from water loss.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Just waiting to get their hooks into you ...


Hooked fruits of six British wild flowers, that you might find attached to your trousers after a country walk in autumn. How many can you identify? Answers at the bottom.


A. Fruits about 2.5 cm. in diameter. Common on woodland edges and waste ground.


B. fruits about 5mm. long. In hedgerows and grassland, often on calcareous soils.


C. Fruits about 3mm. long. A woodland herb.



D. Fruits about 3mm. in diameter. A major agricultural weed, common in hedgerows.


E. Fruits about 8-10mm. A common weed of waste places, often found on woodland edges.























F. Fruits about 3mm. A woodland herb.


















Answers:
A. Burdock Actium lappa.
B. Agrimony Agromonia eupatoria
C. Enchanter's nightshade Circaea lutetiana
D. Gooosegrass aka cleavers aka sticky Jack Galium aparine
E. Herb bennet aka wood avens Geum urbanum
F. Sanicle Sanicula europaea