Uncommon wildflowers, part two. I started this occasional series with Ivy Broomrape which is parasitic on the roots of Ivy. Here is another member of the Broomrape family of plants: Common Toothwort (Lathrea squamaria), parasitic on the roots of Hazel and Alder in particular.
'Common' is a relative concept. L. squamaria is rare in Eastern England, a small colony in Wain Wood is the only locale I'm aware of near me. More common in other parts of the country into Wales and southern Scotland but not that common.
Nonetheless its global distribution is huge: across Europe, north into Scandinavia, east through Russia as far as Siberia, south easterly through Turkey, Iran, Pakistan to the Western Himalayas. So this is a species that's both 'native' and 'exotic'. Uncommon in Hertfordshire but a citizen of the world.







