Description:
This perennial herbaceous plant is 3–10" (7.5–25 cm.) tall, often
forming clusters of flowering stalks with scale-like leaves. These
plants, including their stems, leaves, and flowers, can be pale yellow,
pale brown, pale red, or red, and they are minutely pubescent; the
plant is also aromatic. The erect central stem is terete, stout,
fleshy, and
unbranched. Sessile alternate leaves occur along the central stem that
are 4–10
mm. long and 2–5 mm. across; they can be sparsely to densely
distributed, and they are either ascending or appressed
against the stem. The leaves can be various shapes, including ovate,
ovate-oblong, lanceolate-oblong, or oval, and their margins are
toothless; sometimes the uppermost margins of the leaves appear eroded
(erose). Sometimes the scale-like leaves are bicolored, becoming
whitish or yellowish along their margins. The inflorescence consists of
a raceme of 2–12 flowers (rarely single-flowered) that nods toward its
tip; the flowers are held laterally or nod toward the ground. The
pedicels (basal stalks) of the flowers are 4–8 mm. long at flowering
time; they become longer after the flowers are replaced by seed
capsules. At the base of each pedicel is a scale-like bract that is
similar in appearance to the scale-like leaves below. Individual
flowers are
9–18 mm. long; they are narrowly and loosely campanulate (bell-shaped).
Each flower has
4–5 sepals, 4–5 petals, 4-5 inserted stamens, and a 4–5
celled ovary with a disk-shaped stigma on a short style; there is
a ring of hairs along the lower margin of the stigma. The sepals are
shorter and more narrow than the petals. Individual sepals are
7–12 mm. long, 1–5 mm. across, and either linear or lanceolate-oblong
to oblanceolate-oblong in shape. Individual petals are 8–17 mm. long,
4–8 mm. across, and ovate-oblong to obovate-oblong in shape. The
blooming period occurs primarily during the summer or early autumn,
lasting 2–4 weeks
for a colony of plants. Afterwards, the flowers are replaced by seed
capsules and the entire plant begins to turn brown or black. At
maturity,
these capsules are 5–7 mm. long, 4–5 mm. across, ovoid-globoid in
shape, and thin-walled; they spit open longitudinally between segments
to release their seeds. The narrow seeds are about 1 mm. in length and
oblong-fusiform in shape; they are small enough to be blown about by
the wind. The root system consists of a cluster of fleshy fibrous
roots; these roots are parasitically connected to the hyphae of
certain soil fungi. Because this plant lacks chlorophyll, it is
completely dependent on the fungi for survival.
Cultivation:
The
preference is moist to dry-mesic conditions and a woodland soil with
abundant decaying organic matter; because this plant lacks chlorophyll,
sunlight doesn't matter, although it is normally found in shaded to
semi-shaded areas. It also requires the presence of specific soil fungi
in the soil in order to survive.
Range
&
Habitat: The native
Pinesap (Monotropa hypopitys) occurs in widely scattered areas of
Illinois, where it is considered uncommon (see
Distribution
Map).
This
plant is widely distributed in the United States and it also occurs in
Eurasia. Habitats include moist to dry-mesic deciduous woodlands, mixed
woodlands (conifers and deciduous trees), coniferous woodlands
(north of Illinois), wooded rocky bluffs, and wooded areas along
sandstone and limestone cliffs. Pinesap is found in high quality
natural areas.
Faunal
Associations:
Bumblebees cross-pollinate
the flowers of Pinesap (Monotropa hypopitys), where both nectar and
pollen are available as floral rewards (Yatskievych, 2006; Klooster
& Culley, 2009). An oligophagous thrips,
Thrips monotropae,
is
sometimes found in the flowers of Pinesap and those of a similar plant,
Indian Pipe (Monotropa uniflora). White-tailed Deer occasionally chomp
off the upper one-half of the flowering stalks; such plants can be
found in one of the included photos. The seeds of Pinesap may spread to
new areas by clinging to the muddy feet or wet fur of mammals in
woodlands.
Photographic
Location: Woodland areas in SW Virginia. The photos were
taken by Paul Showers,
Copyright © 2019.
Comments:
Depending on its coloration, Pinesap can be an attractive plant when
its flowering stalks develop. This coloration varies from one locale to
the next and may depend, in part, on what time of year the flowering
stalks develop. Pinesap is one of a small number of plants in Illinois
that are completely parasitic on either fungi or other plants because
they lack chlorophyll. In addition to its ability to directly extract
nutrients from the hyphae (fungal strands) of certain soil fungi,
Pinesap is also able to indirectly extract nutrients (e.g., sugars)
from neighboring trees by using the hyphae of these fungi as
intermediate conduits of such nutrients (Björkman, 1960). In contrast,
some parasitic plants,
such as Beechdrops (Epifagus virginiana) and Cancer Root (Conopholis
americana), are able to extract nutrients from neighboring trees
directly
through their root systems. Pinesap is most similar to another
parasitic plant that lacks chlorophyll, Indian Pipe (Monotropa
uniflora). It is easily distinguished from this latter species by the
following characteristics: 1) Pinesap almost always has several flowers
per stalk, while Indian Pipe has only one flower per stalk, 2) the
foliage and flowers of Pinesap can assume several different colors, but
they are rarely white, which is the predominant color of Indian Pipe, and 3)
the foliage and flowers of Pinesap are minutely hairy, while those of
Indian Pipe are hairless. Both of these species occur in similar
habitats; in Illinois, Pinesap is less common than Indian Pipe. In
older sources, the scientific name of Pinesap is often spelled
Monotropa hypopithys,
however this is considered an error. An
alternative scientific name of this plant that is sometimes used is
Hypopitys monotropa.