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Dodder (Cuscuta epithymum)

Dodder on bell heather
 
Dodder on bell heather
 
Where
Dodder occurs mainly on heathland
When
Dodder can best be seen from July-September 
How many
Dodder is relatively widespread, but nowhere abundant

When compared to most other plants, Dodder really is a strange one, but at least it is relatively easy to identify. Little more than a tangled mass of slender, reddy-coloured threads draped over gorse or heather; Dodder's tiny, pale-pink, densely clustered bell-shaped flowers add to its sense of mystery.

Not only is the appearance of Dodder unusual, though, but so is its lifestyle.

An annual, parasitic plant, in late-spring a slender Dodder stem emerges from germinating over-wintered seeds, and entwines itself, always anti-clockwise, around the nearest host plant, providing, of course, that one is within reaching distance.

Dodder growth at this stage depends entirely on food reserves contained in the seed, for the plant has no green chlorophyll, and therefore cannot photosynthesise. But once the Dodder is established, the lower part of the stem withers and falls away, leaving the Dodder to depend solely on its unfortunate host, from which it takes sugar and other nutrients through suckers that penetrate stem and branches.

Dodder growth is rapid, and it quickly engulfs host and adjacent plants in a tangled cloak of incredibly fine, Dodder threads, colouring the landscape with a wine-red mantle.

Dodder is widespread in the New Forest, although not often abundant. Heywood Sumner in 1923 noted that ‘Dodder seems to thrive on the ash left by a Forest fire. New growth heath is often smothered by the crimson threads of this curious parasite.’

That Dodder has long been the subject of contempt is reflected in alternative, country names such as hell-weed, devil’s guts, and strangleweed. Indeed, John Pechey in The Compleat Herbal of Physical Plants (1694), pulls no punches at all, contemptuously saying of Dodder: ’This fawning Parasite, and ungrateful Guest, hugs the Herb it hangs upon, with its long Threads and reddish Twigs; and so closely embraces it, that at length it defrauds the hospitable Herb of its Nourishment, and destroys it by its treacherous Embraces.’

Dodder is not very nice at all, then!

References:
Collins New Generation Guide - Wild Flowers of Britain and Northern Europe: Alastair Fitter
Reader’s Digest Field Guide to the Wild Flowers of Britain
The Englishman’s Flora: Geoffrey Grigson
A Guide to the New Forest: Heywood Sumner

 

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