Showing posts with label Viola odorata. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Viola odorata. Show all posts

Saturday, October 11, 2025

A violet-ant mutually beneficial symbiosis

 

Sweet violets Viola odorata produce two types of flower - the familiar scented kind that are amongst the first wild flowers to appear in spring and are pollinated by bumblebees, and a summer cleistogamous version that remains as a closed bud and self-pollinates without the intervention of insects. Insect pollination in early spring can be a chancy, hit-or-miss affair but, come what may, the cleistogamous flowers aways produce seeds in early autumn. This is a seed capsule of one such that I found in the garden, splitting open in three segments to release its seeds. Each seed has a small, white, oily attachment, an elaiosome, that ants find irresistible. They carry the seeds away so, if you grow violets in a garden, seedlings are likely to appear in unexpected places.














I’ve sown some freshly collected sweet violet seeds now, because they’ll need vernalisation, subjection to the freezing temperatures of winter, to break their dormancy.

 


Monday, March 24, 2014

White Violets



We found this large patch of white sweet violets, with more than 100 blooms, beside the disused railway line near Cotherstone in Teesdale at the weekend.


















Sweet violet Viola odorata is the earliest of the violets to bloom and also the species that most often produces white-flowered variants. It spreads via stolons and this patch, which was more than a metre across, must be quite old. Although sweet violet is a native species it's often hard to tell whether plants are genuinely wild or are descendants of plants that have been planted in gardens and have then escaped back into the wild after being dumped with garden waste.  This patch is difficult to reach, under a very prickly hawthorn, and grows amongst stinging nettles which must hide it in summer.