GALLERY


Group: UNCOMMON PINEWOOD HERBS

Creeping lady's-tresses (Goodyera repens)

Goodyera repens

Where and when encountered: Glenmore Forest Park on 28 July 2023

About: The orchid creeping lady's-tresses grows in the herb layer of coniferous woodland, especially that of Scots pine, and has a preference for slight-to-moderate shade in moist moss and needles. Caledonian pine forest in the Scottish Highlands contains most of the remaining core populations of this species.


Twinflower (Linnaea borealis)

Linnaea borealis

Where and when encountered: Grantown-on-Spey on 3 June 2024

About: Twinflower is a creeping perennial of pine woodland (and, occasionally, birch woodland or previously wooded sites). Most populations in the plant's core range – the eastern Highlands of Scotland – consist of isolated patches of a small number of clones, where there are only limited prospects of seed production.

Editor's note: Conservation work is being carried out to transplant clones into new patches, with the hope of restoring natural seed production.


One-flowered wintergreen (Moneses uniflora)

Moneses uniflora

Where and when encountered: Grantown-on-Spey on 20 June 2024

About: One-flowered wintergreen is a wildflower of pinewoods with a Great British distribution almost entirely restricted to the Scottish Highlands, including the Cairngorms National Park. Like other true wintergreens, the plant supplements photosynthesis by deriving energy from soil fungus.


Lesser twayblade (Neottia cordata)

Neottia cordata

Where and when encountered: Cairn Gorm lower slopes on 24 June 2024

About: Lesser twayblade is an often-overlooked herb of habitats such as wet heath, blanket bog, and carr woodland.

Editor's note: Although not photographed here within a native pinewood setting, that is one of the other habitats where this small orchid can be found growing.


Intermediate wintergreen (Pyrola media)

Pyrola media

Where and when encountered: Anagach Woods on 5 July 2022

About: Intermediate wintergreen, an evergreen perennial, is predominantly a plant of the Scottish Highlands, where well-drained soils in woodland and on heathland are favoured. Like other true wintergreens, the plant supplements photosynthesis by deriving energy from soil fungus.


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