Sunday, 7 April 2019

April 2019 (Lesser Celandine, nictinasty, Michael Higgins)


In the flowerbed near our front door we have a clump of Lesser Celandine.  It has not been planted there, at least not by us, and is probably the result of a stray seed or a bit of tuber ending up in the soil by some means unknown.  Anyway, it seems happy there and it doesn't clash with any grand garden designs we may have had (we haven’t), so there it can stay.   Lesser celandine (Ficaria verna) is, as the botanical name suggests, considered a harbinger of spring.  It is a member of the buttercup family and is an important forage plant for early emerging bumblebees as well as some early solitary bees and other flies.  It loves shade and in the right conditions will quickly carpet a forest floor with its dark green foliage and bright yellow flowers.  Its leaves and tubers are both edible and mildly toxic, so it is recommended that they are either cooked or dried, which converts the toxins to something more benign, before making a feast of them.  The knobbly tubers also give the plant its other common name – pilewort.
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As a buttercup, they come within the family Ranunculaceae, which comes from the Latin ranunculus for ‘little frog’.  Though I have searched the Internet for a better explanation, the concensus seems to be that it is called little frog because buttercups live near water like frogs do.  There must be a better explanation than that, mustn’t there?
Lesser Celandine closed
Talking of explanations, you may have noticed another feature of lesser celandine – the flowers close by mid-afternoon and don’t open again until the following morning.  There are several plant species that do this, one of the most striking is goat’s-beard, which has the alternative name – ‘Jack go to bed at noon’ because it is never open in the afternoon.  Apparently there are some specialist cells at the base of the petals in a structure call the pulvinis.  The chemistry of these cells changes so that they swell or contract to move the petals open or closed.  It is thought that this is a response to temperature changes and possibly daylight as well because on cold dull days the petals don’t open at all.  The big question, of course, is why does the flower need to close anyway?  Why not display itself to passing pollinators all the time?  Perhaps the plant doesn’t want to attract pollinators when there is not enough energy from the sun to produce nectar, or maybe it is to avoid damage from sudden frosts.  The fact is that nobody yet seems to know.  Incidentally, the word that describes this process for both petals and leaves is ‘nictinasty’!
The faintly variegated leaf of Lesser Celandine
If you have followed this column for any length of time you will know that I’m always banging on about threats to our wildlife, loss of habitat, pesticides, insect declines, etc.   But it seems that I’m not alone.  I found this quote from a speech at a conference on biodiversity given by Ireland’s president Michael Higgins recently and just had to share it with you.
“Around the world, the library of life that has evolved over billions of years – our biodiversity – is being destroyed, poisoned, polluted, invaded, fragmented, plundered, drained and burned at a rate not seen in human history - If we were coal miners we’d be up to our waists in dead canaries.”

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