Showing posts with label moth mullein. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moth mullein. Show all posts

Friday, June 30, 2023

Plants on walls

 Chasmophytes are specialised plants that colonise crevices in bare rock faces - ivy-leaved toadflax is a notable example, that even produces seed capsules that grow towards dark cavities, planting their own seeds back into the wall. But there are a surprising number of plants that colonise the man-made equivalent of rocky cliff faces - either drystone walls or walls constructed with mortar. 


Here are a few of the accidental wall colonists that I've encountered recently.


Native wild strawberry on a wall top at Stanhope in Weardale, undoubtedly arriving as a seed in a bird dropping

Native dog violet in a damp retaining wall beside the railway line at Hexham in Northumberland. It has a ballistic seed dispersal method, firing out seeds when its capsule splits and contracts

Native shining crane'sbill in a drystone wall at West Blackdene in Weardale. This plant, a wall specialist, has leaves that turn bright crimson as summer progresses, perhaps induced by stress as conditions become drier.

Non-native trailing bellflower, on a wall top beside Quarry Heads Lane in Durham city. Escaped from a nearby garden.
Native wall lettuce, another wall specialist with plumed seeds that are carried on the wind. Growing here on a ledge below the parapet of Prebends bridge, spanning the river Wear in Durham city.



Moth mullein, a non-native, well established in the wild. Here, on old walls beside Sunderland Marina. 


Wallflower, doing exactly what its name dictates, growing in a wall beside Sunderland Marina. Cultivated since medieval times but well established on walls in the wild.