365 Urban Species. #155: White Lychnis
Jun. 4th, 2006 09:29 pm
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Urban species #155: White lychnis Lychnis alba
Flowers exist to be pollinated. It is joyous chance that what we agree with bees and butterflies about what makes a flower attractive. These insects fly by day, and the sun reflects an array of colors on flowers, some that even our large eyes are blind to. Many flowers even close their petals at night. But other plants have chosen other partners to spread their pollen. Flowers that are pollinated by moths have no need for yellows and purples--they wouldn't be seen by their night-flying partners. So it is with white lychnis: their bright colorless flowers bloom at night.
Other common names for this plant include evening lychnis, white cockle, and white campion. It is easy to confuse with several close relatives with similar common names. White lychnis was introduced from Europe, and has spread to become naturalized across North America. It grows in vacant lots, fields, and wet waste areas.

off-topic
Date: 2006-06-05 10:15 am (UTC)i like to think of you as lj's go-to centipede guy. i currently have a Scutigera coleoptrata freaking out in my kitchen sink because it has been unable so far to manage to climb out of it. is just leaving it alone to get out on its own the best course of action? if not, any advice on how to catch it? thank you.
sincerely,
artemii
Re: off-topic
Date: 2006-06-05 12:44 pm (UTC)Re: off-topic
Date: 2006-06-05 01:13 pm (UTC)Good luck!!
Re: off-topic
Date: 2006-06-05 04:20 pm (UTC)Re: off-topic
Date: 2006-06-05 09:08 pm (UTC)i built it a little bridge out of the sink. it was still in when i left this morning but when i got back it was gone. no idea whether it went down the drain or used the little bridge.
and yes - the shooting out the other end was why i didn't do that. :) in the future i'll pinch the end!