A Tale of Two Bittercresses.
Today we planted a flower border. Part of the Charles Street Recreation Ground
is being cared for by Louth Community Food Garden
(A Transition Town Louth initiative). We
thought some wildflowers would be
nice. James pointed to a little 'weed' already growing and remarked, "That’s Hairy Bittercress – you can eat that".
I took a little of it home.
On dissecting, under a microscope, the
two millimetre long flower, I noticed four long stamens and two shorter, hidden
stamens. It was the Wavy Bittercress, Cardamine flexuosa, rather than the Hairy
Bittercress, Cardamine hirsuta. Good job
it was still flowering in mid-December or we would never have known and the sum
total of human knowledge would have been less extensive. When viewed under the x50 magnification of a
stereo microscope the flowers are spectacularly beautiful but for all those who
don't have such an instrument there's always the internet. Here's a nice webpage with photos of both C. flexuosa and C. hirsuta so you can see there's not much
difference. However, there is a
preferred habitat difference between the two species with C. flexuosa found
more often in damper, partially shaded locations than the dry sites favoured by
C. Hirsuta.
Joan Gibbons, in The Flora of Lincolnshire, notes that C. hirsuta is recorded in all Lincolnshire Divisions, describing the distribution
as "Common; gardens and waste places". However, she lists C. flexuosa as not
recorded in four of the eighteen Lincolnshire Divisions and the distribution is
given as "Occasional; damp woodrides and bogs". Now this is all rather curious as this bank
along the roadside edge where we are creating a wildflower border is not a damp
woodland ride or a bog but is rather well drained open ground, much more likely
to be the favoured habitat of C. hirsuta than of C. flexuosa.
Enter the man from the Council. We had of course sought, and received,
permission to turn this strip of neglected ‘weedy’ land, bordered by
close-cropped grass one side and a fence to the road on the other, into a
wildflower haven. Officialdom was
suitably supportive: "I'm more than happy for this work to proceed and you
have my full support", but then
came the sting in the tail: “Can I just ask that when you spread the seed at
the fence-line that you try to leave a gap along the fence line itself, so that
we're not creating a situation where the flowers are overly protruding through
the fence onto the path like the weeds currently do, as we have to spray them
back annually from the fence side and the wild-flowers may add to this issue if
planted too close to the fence".
The Council doesn't do organic when it comes to pavement edges.
Now there is a problem with wildflowers and the clue’s in
the name. They are not always very
tame. The bittercresses, like other Brassicaceae,
have seed-pods that burst explosively scattering the seeds a few feet. Furthermore, the seeds can lie dormant in the
soil for many years, which may account for the existence of bittercresses here
before we even started our wildflower seed sowing. So like it or not, some of these plants are
going to grow dangerously close to the place that that the Council deems
appropriate for drenching with glyphosate.
Of course, I'm not going to suggest that C. flexuosa is a
rare and endangered species, but it is the less common of the two common
bittercresses and, moreover, it is growing here on a somewhat surprising site. It is little details like this that not only demonstrate
biodiversity but also add interest to our neighbourhood, at least for those
with eyes to see and curiosity to satisfy.
If the Council were to wipe this diversity away with a quick pass of
Roundup we will all be the poorer, except for the shareholders of Monsanto, who
rely of the ignorance and carelessness of the global population. There is accumulating evidence that
glyphosate is a much more problematic chemical than the manufacturers and our
governments would have us believe. The
serious student may wish to start at this extensive database but there are many more accessible accounts such as this and this and this one.
Most important of all is the paper by Michael Antoniou et
al., Roundup and Birth Defects, Earth Open SourceJune 2011.
I wonder what it will take for people to open their eyes to
appreciate the wondrous complexity of the natural world and for our
governments, national and local, to stop the ecocide they are committing. I for one, prefer to take out my hand-lens
and count the stamens in a tiny flower than to wonder whether my tiny, but
growing, grandchild will be born with birth defects because an American
corporation wanted to maximise its profits and an English Local Authority
wanted a tidy road verge.
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