USDA Forest Service Celebrating Wildflowers

 

Thieves from the Heath - Mycotrophic Wildflowers

Species

Allotropa virgata

Hemitomes congestum

Monotropa hypopitys

Monotropa uniflora

Monotropsis odorata

Pityopus californica

Pleuricospora fimbriolata

Pterospora andromedea

Sarcodes sanguinea

Monotropa uniflora – Ghost Plant, Indian Pipe

Indian pipe is a perennial wildflower with a wide geographic distribution throughout the United States, from Maine to California and from Florida to Alaska. It is absent from the southwest, intermountain west and the central Rocky mountains. However, Indian Pipe is not a commonly encountered wildflower.

Monotropa uniflora.
Monotropa uniflora flower. Photo by Gary Monroe.

Map of North America showing green shaded areas where the species may be found.
Monotropa uniflora range map. USDA PLANTS Database.

Monotropa uniflora (Monotropa – once turned; uniflora – one flowered) ranges in height from 10 to 30 centimeters. The entire plant is a translucent, “ghostly” white, sometimes pale pinkish-white and commonly has black flecks. The leaves are scale-like and flecked with black on the flower stalk (peduncle). As the Latin epithet uniflora implies, the stem bears a single flower. Upon emerging from the ground, the flower is pendant (downwardly pointed). As the anthers and stigma mature, the flower is spreading to all most perpendicular to the stem. The fruit is a capsule. As the capsule matures, the flower becomes erect (in line with the stem). Once ripened, seed is released through slits that open from the tip to the base of the capsule. The plant is persistent after seed dispersal.

Monotropa uniflora.
Monotropa uniflora flowers. Photo by Hugh and Carol Nourse.

Monotropa uniflora flower.
Monotropa uniflora flower. Photo by Gary Monroe.

America’s eminent poet, Emily Dickinson, called the Indian pipe “the preferred flower of life.” In a letter to Mabel Todd, she confides, “I still cherish the clutch with which I bore it from the ground when a wondering child, and unearthly booty, and maturity only enhances the mystery, never decreases it.”

Book cover: Poems, Emily Dickinson.
Poems. By Emily Dickinson

Monotropa uniflora.
Monotropa uniflora. Photo by Gary Monroe.

Monotropa uniflora flowers from early summer to early autumn. It is found in mature, moist, shaded forests.

Monotropa uniflora.
Monotropa uniflora. Photo by Hugh and Carol Nourse.

Monotropa uniflora.
Monotropa uniflora. Photo by Chris Wagner.

U.S. Forest Service
Rangeland Management
Botany Program

1400 Independence Ave., SW, Mailstop Code: 1103
Washington DC 20250-1103

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Location: http://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/interesting/mycotrophic/monotropa_uniflora.shtml
Last modified: Monday, 02-Mar-2009 16:18:32 EST