Horseshoe vetch (Hippocrepis comosa) is commonly found on
downland turf, favouring chalky or limestone soils. It is widespread in all
parts of Great Britain except the far north.
The woody rootstock produces many trailing stems that turn
up to produce the flower-heads (from May to August). It grows from 4 to 16
inches high (10-40 cms). Each leaf has two rows of leaflets with a terminal
singleton.
The yellow flowers have evolved a subtle means of ensuring the
production of fertile seed. The most common pollinators are heavy insects such
as bumble and honey bees. The petals are so shaped that when a bee lands on the
lower petal the stamens force a string of pollen through a hole at the end of
the petal and onto the bee. At the same time the stigma touches the underside
of the bee where there may be pollen gathered from visiting another flower.
The ripe pods break up into three to six horseshoe-shaped
segments, thus giving the plant both its familiar and botanical name –
hippocrepis is Greek for horseshoe.
© John Welford
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