Many hemiparasitic plants have much higher transpiration rates than their host which enables them to divert the flow of resources from their host. The rest of the resources are produced from autonomous photosynthesis. Haustoria are formed in the root system of Indian paintbrush and development is signalled by molecules exuded by the host plants, allowing the roots to become partially heterotrophic. Haustoria are specialized absorptive organs that invade the roots of host plants. Indian paintbrush is a root hemiparasite, which means it is partially parasitic, acquiring some of its water and nutrients from haustorial connections with a host plant. Indian paintbrush is primarily a biennial, although sometimes it can be annual, producing a basal rosette the first year and flowering stalk the second year. Others place this plant in the broom-rape (Orobanchaceae) family due to shared molecular features. Most taxonomists place Indian paintbrush in the figwort (Scrophulariaceae) family. Botanists do not know how the seed is dispersed. The fruit is a small capsule producing hundreds of small seeds. Flowering takes place from May to August. It’s the bracts, not the inconspicuous flowers, that attract pollinators such as hummingbirds. The species name coccinea means scarlet although sometimes the bracts are yellow and look like their ends have been dipped in paint, hence the common name paintbrush. The three-lobed bracts with showy scarlet tips provide the spectacle. The flowers are perfect (they have both pistillate and staminate parts), inconspicuous, in a dense terminal spike, irregular, 2.5 centimetres (one inch) long, and borne in the axil of the bract. The basal leaves are either three-lobed or entire. The leaves on the flower stalk are shaped like birds’ feet. In Ontario 50% of Indian paintbrush’s elemental occurrences are found on alvars.Ĭastilleja coccinea reaches heights of 60 centimetres (two feet). Its range extends from the Missouri River west into Kansas and Oklahoma, and north into portions of Saskatchewan, Manitoba and Ontario. Indian paintbrush does not perform well in shade and is typically found on sub-acid to slightly alkaline soils. When combined with Castilleja coccinea, they offer a varied palette of scarlet, orange, blue, pink and yellow from spring through summer. Some of the associated species growing with it are balsam ragwort (Packera paupercula), little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium), wood lily (Lilium philadelphicum), hairy beardtongue (Penstemon hirsutus), prairie smoke (Geum triflorum) and blue-eyed grass (Sisyrinchium montanum). Cattle graze the meadow, preventing shrubs from overtaking the flowering plants. At Carden it grows on thin, moist soils over limestone bedrock. Indian paintbrush is a terrestrial herb or flowering plant found on alvars, moist meadows, prairies and open woods. I now go back every year to see the show. It was one of the most breathtaking scenes I have experienced: a sea of brilliant scarlet, orange and yellow. A number of years ago, while hiking on the Carden Alvar north of Toronto, I stumbled across a stand of Indian paintbrush (Castilleja coccinea).
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