Monotropa uniflora
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Monotropa uniflora | ||||||||||||||
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Monotropa uniflora L. |
Monotropa uniflora, also known as the Ghost Plant, Indian Pipe, or Corpse Plant is a herbaceous perennial plant, formerly classified in the family Monotropaceae, but now included within the Ericaceae. It is native to temperate regions of Asia, North America and northern South America, but with large gaps between areas.[1] It is generally scarce or rare in occurrence.
Unlike most plants, it is white and does not contain chlorophyll. Instead of generating energy from sunlight, it is parasitic, more specifically a myco-heterotroph. Its hosts are certain fungi that are mycorrhizal with trees, meaning it ultimately gets its energy from photosynthetic trees. Since it is not dependent on sunlight to grow, it can grow in very dark environments as in the understory of dense forest. The complex relationship that allows this plant to grow also makes propagation difficult. They also cannot be used as cut flowers, since they brown and collapse in a few hours.
The plant is sometimes completely white but commonly has black flecks and a pale pink coloration (photo)[2]. Rare variants may have a deep red color, as shown here and here.
The stems reach heights of 10-30 cm, clothed with small scale-leaves 5-10 mm long. As its scientific name suggests, and unlike the related Monotropa hypopitys, the stems bear only a single flower, 10-15 mm long with 3-8 petals. It flowers from early summer to early autumn.
Like most mycoheterotrophic plants, M. uniflora associates with a small range of fungal hosts, all of them members of Russulaceae [3]. A photo of M. uniflora roots, showing ectomycorrhizal root tips and fungus rhizomorphs, is here [4].
[edit] References
- ^ Ray Neyland, Melissa K. Hennigan "A Cladistic Analysis of Monotropa uniflora.."
- ^ David Matthews "Indian Pipes, Ithaca NY"
- ^ S. Yang, D.H. Pfister "Monotropa uniflora plants of eastern Massachusetts form mycorrhizae with a diversity of russulacean fungi."
- ^ Steve Trudell "Mycorrhizas (5): Fall Mushrooms, Ghostly Fungus-Robbers, and a Definition Revisited"
[edit] External links
- Several images are available from the USDA PLANTS Profile.
- Ca. 100 images are available from flickr.