Ivydene Gardens Adder's Tongue to Borage Wild Flower Families Gallery:
Birdsnest Family

 

Click on Underlined Text in:-

Common Name to view that Plant Description Page
Botanical Name to link to Plant or Seed Supplier
Flowering Months to view photos
Habitat to view further Natural Habitat details and Botanical Society of the British Isles Distribution Map


ADDER'S TONGUE TO BORAGE WILD FLOWER FAMILIES GALLERY PAGES

Site Map of pages with content (o)

FLOWER BED WITH WILD FLOWERS PICTURES
Bed Pictures 1
Bed Pictures 2

HABITAT TABLES
Flowers in Acid Soil
Flowers in Chalk Soil
Flowers in Marine Soil
Flowers in Neutral Soil
Ferns
Grasses
Rushes
Sedges

Birdsnest Family:-

Birdsnest Family plant table with its Common Name - Botanical Name. Flowering Months Range. Habitat with link to that Wild Flower Gallery:-

Common Name

Botanical Name

Flowering Months

Habitat

Yellow Birdsnest

Monotropa hypopitys

July-August

A saprophytic perennial herb of leaf litter in shaded woodlands, most frequent under Fagus and Corylus on calcareous substrates, and under Pinus on more acidic soils. It also grows in damp dune-slacks, where it is usually associated with Salix repens. 0-395 m (Buxton, Derbys.).

yellowfflobirdsnest

yellowfflosbirdsnest

yellowffolbirdsnest

yellowfforbirdsnest

Flower from Kenfig Burrows on 9 July

Flowers from Kenfig Burrows on 9 July

Foliage from Kenfig Burrows in July

Form from Kenfig Burrows in July

 


WILD FLOWER PLANT INDEX
a-h
i-p
q-z


WILD FLOWER FAMILY PAGES

ad borage gallery

(o)Adder's Tongue Family
Amaranth Family
(o)Arrow-Grass Family
(o)Arum Family
(o)Balsam Family
Bamboo Family
(o)Barberry Family
(o)Bedstraw Family
(o)Beech Family
(o)Bellflower Family
(o)Bindweed Family
(o)Birch Family
(o)Birds-Nest Family*
(o)Birthwort Family
(o)Bogbean Family
(o)Bog Myrtle Family
(o)Borage Family

box crowberry gallery

(o)Box Family
(o)Broomrape Family
(o)Buckthorn Family
(o)Buddleia Family
(o)Bur-reed Family
(o)Buttercup Family
(o)Butterwort Family
(o)Clubmoss Family
(o)Cornel (Dogwood) Family
(o)Crowberry Family

cabbages gallery

(o)Crucifer (Cabbage/Mustard) 1
(o)Crucifer (Cabbage/Mustard) 2

cypress cud gallery

Cypress Family
(o)Daffodil Family
(o)Daisy Family
(o)Daisy Cudweeds Family
(o)Daisy Chamomiles Family
(o)Daisy Thistle Family
(o)Daisy Catsears Family

hawk dock gallery

(o)Daisy Hawkweeds Family
(o)Daisy Hawksbeards Family
(o)Daphne Family
(o)Diapensia Family
(o)Dock Bistorts Family
(o)Dock Sorrels Family

duckw fern gallery

Duckweed Family
Eel-Grass Family
(o)Elm Family

figwort fum gallery

(o)Figwort - Mulleins Family
(o)Figwort - Speedwells
Family

(o)Filmy Fern Family
(o)Flax Family
(o)Flowering-Rush Family
(o)Frog-bit Family
(o)Fumitory Family

g goosefoot gallery

(o)Gentian Family
(o)Geranium Family
(o)Glassworts Family
(o)Gooseberry Family
(o)Goosefoot Family

grasses123 gallery

Grass Family 1
(o)Grass Family 2
Grass Family 3

g brome gallery

(o)Grass Soft Bromes 1
(o)Grass Soft Bromes 2
Grass Soft Bromes 3

h lobelia gallery

(o)Hazel Family
(o)Heath Family
(o)Hemp Family
Herb-Paris Family
(o)Holly Family
(o)Honeysuckle Family
Horned-Pondweed Family
(o)Hornwort Family
(o)Horsetail Family
(o)Iris Family
(o)Ivy Family
(o)Jacobs Ladder Family
(o)Lily Family
(o)Lily Garlic Family
(o)Lime Family
(o)Lobelia Family

l olive gallery

(o)Loosestrife Family
(o)Mallow Family
(o)Maple Family
(o)Mares-tail Family
(o)Marsh Pennywort Family
(o)Melon (Gourd/Cucumber)
Mesembryanthemum Family
(o)Mignonette Family
(o)Milkwort Family
(o)Mistletoe Family
(o)Moschatel Family
Naiad Family
(o)Nettle Family
(o)Nightshade Family
(o)Oleaster Family
(o)Olive Family

orchid parn gallery

(o)Orchid Family 1
(o)Orchid Family 2

peaflowers gallery

(o)Peaflower Family
(o)Peaflower Clover Family
(o)Peaflower Vetches/Peas Family
(o)Parnassus-Grass Family

peony pink gallery

Peony Family
(o)Periwinkle Family
Pillwort Family
Pine Family
(o)Pink Family 1
(o)Pink Family 2

p rockrose gallery

Pipewort Family
(o)Pitcher-Plant Family
(o)Plantain Family
(o)Polypody Family
(o)Pondweed Family
(o)Poppy Family
(o)Primrose Family
(o)Purslane Family
Quillwort Family
Rannock Rush Family
(o)Reedmace Family
(o)Rockrose Family

rose12 gallery

(o)Rose Family 1
(o)Rose Family 2
(o)Royal Fern Family

rush saxi gallery

(o)Rush Family
(o)Rush Woodrushes Family
(o)Saint Johns Wort Family
Saltmarsh Grasses
(o)Sandalwood Family
(o)Saxifrage Family

sea sedge2 gallery

Seaheath Family
(o)Sea Lavender Family
(o)Sedge Rush-like Family
(o)Sedges Carex Family 1
(o)Sedges Carex Family 2

sedge3 crop gallery

(o)Sedges Carex Family 3
(o)Sedges Carex Family 4
(o)Spindle-Tree Family
(o)Spurge Family
(o)Stonecrop Family

sun thyme gallery

(o)Sundew Family
(o)Tamarisk Family
Tassel Pondweed Family
(o)Teasel Family
(o)Thyme Family 1
(o)Thyme Family 2

umb violet gallery

(o)Umbellifer Family 1
(o)Umbellifer Family 2
(o)Valerian Family
(o)Verbena Family
(o)Violet Family

water yew gallery

(o)Water Fern Family
(o)Waterlily Family
(o)Water Milfoil Family
(o)Water Plantain Family
(o)Water Starwort Family
Waterwort Family
(o)Willow Family
(o)Willow-Herb Family
(o)Wintergreen Family
(o)Wood-Sorrel Family
Yam Family
Yew Family

Ivydene Horticultural Services logo with I design, construct and maintain private gardens. I also advise and teach you in your own garden. 01634 389677

 

 

Site design and content copyright ©May 2008 Chris Garnons-Williams.

DISCLAIMER: Links to external sites are provided as a courtesy to visitors. Ivydene Horticultural Services are not responsible for the content and/or quality of external web sites linked from this site.  

Article by Sam Jones in The Guardian Monday 9 May 2005 states:-

"Almost a fifth of Britain's plant species are struggling to survive the threats posed by agriculture, overgrazing and the use of herbicides and fertilisers, says a report published today.

The Vascular Plant Red Data List for Great Britain is the result of a two-year survey of British flora. Its analysis shows that out of 1,756 species and subspecies, 345 (19.6%) are threatened.

The report also notes that efforts to save rare species have not been matched by initiatives to safeguard more familiar plants which are now under threat. Among once-common species in serious decline are corn spurrey, purple milk-vetch, basil thyme, lesser butterfly and frog orchids and tubular water dropwort.

Also on the list is henbane, the malodorous herb with which Dr Crippen infamously dispatched his wife in 1910.

Work on the project began in January 2003 when botanists from across the UK were invited to join a working group set up to revise the list of endangered wild plants.

They were charged with drawing up a new catalogue of threatened species and classifying them as "extinct", "critically endangered", "vulnerable" or of "least concern".

The study was co-ordinated by the government's wildlife advisory body, the Joint Nature Conservation Committee, and involved groups such as Scottish National Heritage, the Biological Records Centre, the Botanical Society for the British Isles, the Countryside Council for Wales, English Nature, the Natural History Museum, the conservation charity Plantlife and the Royal Botanic Garden in Edinburgh.

In contrast to previous red lists, the new survey analysed the decline of each species instead of simply listing those that occur in a small number of sites.

It also treated all species - including hybrids - equally, regardless of whether they were native or archaeophyte (introduced before AD1500).

The survey found that some species of grassland plants are disappearing, with many clinging on only in small roadside groups.

Arable plants, too, have almost disappeared from large areas of the country while upland plants are declining because of overgrazing.

"The diversity of our countryside is being constantly degraded as habitats are fragmented and the associated plants are lost," the report says. Although reversing the decline will be "a massive challenge", it is not impossible.

"[Regeneration] ... can only happen through changing the policies for countryside management. However, with the improved understanding presented in this report, we can be optimistic that we know where to focus our efforts."

Simon Leach, a botanical adviser at English Nature, said: "We've been rather good at stopping rare plants from becoming extinct, but less good, perhaps, at stopping common plants from becoming less common.

"We are hoping that agri-environment schemes and other landscape-scale initiatives will help to arrest and reverse the decline of many of these declining species. The new red list points to those that need the most urgent action."

Trevor Dines, a conservation officer at Plantlife, said there was no time for complacency about more common species. "It's horrifying that there are only 11 plants of western juniper left in Britain, for example, yet it has never been listed as a threatened species before."

Threatened flora

Among plants not before classified as at risk but now threatened are:

Ranunculus arvensis - corn buttercup (critically endangered). A very attractive annual buttercup with small yellow flowers, it came to Britain with Roman farmers.

Papaver argemone - prickly poppy (vulnerable). A small, brightly flowered poppy which has not yet made the jump to waysides and road verges as the common poppy has.

Silene noctiflora - night-flowering catchfly (vulnerable). Its creamy-white flowers are semi-closed during the day, but at night reopen fully and emit a strong scent to attract insects.

Astragalus danicus - purple milk-vetch (endangered). Found along the east coast from Scotland to Lincoln and East Anglia.

Euphrasia anglica - eyebright (endangered). Its tiny white flowers are blotched with yellow and purple like a bruised eye. Compresses and tinctures from it were used to treat many eye disorders.

Monotropa hypopitys - yellow bird's-nest (endangered). An odd-looking perennial herb that lives on dead and decaying plant material in the soil.

Polystichum lonchitis - holly fern (vulnerable). An evergreen alpine fern that is small but long-lived. Small populations in Wales and the Lake District; more frequent in the Scottish uplands and western Scotland.

Cuscuta epithymum - dodder (vulnerable). An annual, rootless, twining and scrambling herb which is a parasite, attaching itself to its host by small suckers that remove water and nutrients.

Gentianella campestris - field gentian (vulnerable). A biennial or annual herb with attractive, purply-blue flowers. It is locally common in northern England and Scotland, but absent from most of south and central Britain."