Yellow-wort

Scientific Name: 
Blackstonia perfoliata

Found on chalk and limestone grasslands and sand dunes, Yellow-wort is a low-growing annual that flowers between June and October. Like other members of the gentian family, its yellow flowers close during the afternoon. Its waxy, bluish-green leaves help the plant to retain water in the arid conditions in which it thrives.

How to identify: 
Yellow-wort is unmistakeable: look for yellow flowers with six to eight petals, and pointed, bluish-green leaves that appear in opposite pairs but are fused together around the stem.
Where to find it: 
Found mainly in central and southern England and Wales.
How people can help: 

Areas of rare and unique wildlife, chalk grasslands have been likened to rainforest for the diversity of species they hold. But they are being lost at an alarming rate due to changes in land use causing the decline of grazing: it's estimated that we've lost 80% of our chalk grassland over the last 60 years. The Wildlife Trusts manage many grassland nature reserves for the benefit of the rare wildlife they hold by using traditional management methods such as autumn grazing and scrub clearance. You can help too: volunteer for your local Wildlife Trust and you could be involved in everything from flower surveys to stockwatching.

Statistics: 
Height: up to 30cm
Conservation status: 
Common.
Did you know?: 
Chalk grasslands bloom with wildflowers all summer long, supporting important populations of butterflies, moths and other invertebrates. In these special places, Yellow-wort can be found alongside Bee Orchids, Common Rock-rose, Horseshoe Vetch and Greater Knapweed.
Seasons: 
Summer
Autumn
When to see
Start date: 
June
End date: 
October
Image: 
Yellow-wort - Philip Precey