Lesser Yellow Rattle (Rhinanthus minor) |
Lesser Yellow Rattle is a widespread annual in sunny areas of grassland and farmland across the British Isles; it's also native to much of Europe, northern North America and western Asia. It germinates in early March, pushes strongly serrated leaves from black-spotted stems that can rise to nearly half a metre (18 inches) in height, and blooms between May and September. Its yellow, tube-like flowers extend from fat green calyxes (the pale green structures in the photo above), and are particularly favoured by bumblebees. After the flowers have been pollinated and fade away, tiny seeds develop in the now-brown calyxes. These seeds give the plant its common name, because they rattle around in their casings when the plant is brushed against. The plant also serves as the larval food source for a couple of rare moths, neither of which we've seen here yet. With any luck, maybe someday, the moths will follow.
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