Single Malts - and other odd Musings

Pollinated Indian Pipe - Monotropa uniflora

the above photograph - ©SmcK 29Apr'15

Indian Pipe
Summer Ghost of the Forest
By Carol Gracie
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While enjoying a summer walk in the cool of the forest, your eye might be drawn to something white on the ground, especially in the deep shade of pines, oaks, beeches, or hemlocks. A quick glance could lead you to believe that you’ve found a strange fungus, but a closer look will show that it is a true flower, albeit an unusual one. This white apparition has appropriately been called ghost flower, corpse plant, or more commonly, Indian pipe. Indian pipe is descriptive of the shape of the plant with its flower curved downward so that it faces the ground. The scientific name, Monotropa uniflora, is also appropriate meaning “once-turned, single flower.” Each stalk bears just a solitary flower that turns upward after pollination and remains that way as the fruit develops. It has also been known as bird’s nest for the appearance of its mass of short, blunt roots, and ghost flower and corpse plant, referring to the white, waxy appearance of the plant. Indian pipe is a plant that lacks the green pigment called chlorophyll. Chlorophyll is necessary for photosynthesis, the process whereby plants manufacture their own food (photosynthate) in the presence of sunlight. Lacking chlorophyll, Indian pipe is unable to produce its own food and therefore has no need for true leaves which are replaced by small scales along the stem. It is able to inhabit the darkest areas of the forest where sunlight is in short supply. Plants may grow as a single stem or in clumps of up to 20 stems, but they are not generally found in large number

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