Don’t get me wrong. Clapham Tutin & Warburg was a terrific Flora for its time. The problem lies in their superficial treatment of alien species. Because they only included one species of Pokeweed, a generation of botanists grew up thinking they were seeing Phytolacca americana.
What they were seeing, in fact, was much more likely to be Phytolacca acinosa. The genus is notoriously difficult but if you have ripe fruits, P. acinosa is easy. Its fruits are multiple, like a raspberry or a bramble (left) not a smooth, single berry like a blackcurrant (right)
The real issues for recording Phytolacca species accurately arise because you really do need fresh flowers and ripe fruits simultaneously. In the flowers, you must distinguish between the stamens being in a single whorl (left) or appearing to be in 2 whorls (right).
In fruit, we have already seen the multiple vs. berry distinction (above), but the position of the raceme in fruit is also important: drooping (left) or erect (right).
This is how the key to Phytolacca goes in the Flora of North America. First, P. acinosa is identified on the basis of its multiple fruits (above). Next, the smooth berries are separated. First on the basis of their inflorescences: are they spike-like (left) or racemes (right) ?
The two species with short (or no) pedicels (spike-like ones) are separated on their stamens and inflorescence length. Phytolacca icosandra (left) has anthers in 2 whorls and infl. longer than subtending lvs. P. octandra (right) has 1 whorl of anthers and shorter (or equal) infl.
Of the 3 species with longer pedicels (2-13mm), only one has been recorded from the British Isles: the one identified in CTW, Phytolacca americana (left). Stace also includes P. polyandra from China (right), told by its upright fruiting racemes and stamens in 2 whorls.
That’s not the end of the story, because specialist nurseries like Crug Farm Plants in Wales list a further 6 species for sale: Phytolacca bogotensis (TL), P. dioica (TR), P. esculenta, P. japonica (BL), P. rivinoides (BR) and P. rugosa any of which might escape in due course.
But rest assured, if you find a Pokweed that's not growing in a garden, it is almost certainly going to be Phytolacca acinosa. If it is in fruit, you can easily confirm this by its bramble-like, multiple fruits.
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Really interesting development in the population dynamics of Ragwort at Silwood. After 4 years of rock-bottom plant numbers (2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023) when the study population looked like this:
there are real signs of a come-back in 2024:
This is what the Ragwort population has done since 1981. You can see the 8 population peaks and the subsequent crashes. Then the 4 years of essentially no plants (and no Cinnabar moths either, of course) between 2020 and 2023. Then this year 3.26 flowering stems per square metre.
This is what Ashurst looks like in a ‘ragwort year’. There are more than 10 flowering individuals per square metre.
This is what Ashurst looks like this year (1 August 2023). There’s not a single ragwort plant in sight.
So what is going on ? Between 1980 and 2019 ragwort numbers fluctuated dramatically but there were no extended periods of very low plant densities (less than 1 m-2). Since 2020 we’ve seen 4 consecutive years with exceptionally low numbers.
Identifying rushes. The three annual species of Section Tenageia can be tricky to tell apart. The common species is Juncus bufonius (left) and the two rarer species are J. foliosus (upper right) and J. ranarius (lower right).
They all have flat or inrolled bifacial (grass-like) leaves on the stem (the basal leaves are typically withered by flowering time). The diffuse panicle is interspersed with leaf-like bracts and each flower has 2 small bracteoles.
Juncus foliosus is the easiest to identify: its leaves are more than 1.5mm wide (left) and the seeds have longitudinal ridges (x20, right A).
Identifying rushes. The reason why our 31 Juncus spp. are so tricky to identify is that the genus is so complicated botanically. It’s worth starting by looking at each of the 10 Sections that are represented in UK, just so that you can see the issues involved.
Identifying grasses. It’s obviously a Brome, but which Brome is it ? First, we need to identify the genus (i.e. is it Bromus, or Bromopsis, or Anisantha or Ceratochloa ?). This is the lower half of Key H on p. 1033.
#6 Are the lemmas strongly keeled on the back (left) or not (right). Definitely not keeled, so on to #7
#7 Always a tricky one. Annual or perennial? Look at the roots and check for the absence of rhizomes. See if there are any non-flowering shoots. No rhizomes and no sterile shoots, so annual is the best bet. On to #10.
Seaside Grass Quiz. This is arranged by habitat (sand-dune, dune slack, rocks & shingle, cliff and tidal mud-flat) then by plant size within habitat (big, medium, small). Answers tomorrow.