Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Swamp Pink

Helonias

Description:

Blooming in March to May, its fragrant flowers are pink and occur in a cluster at the end a vertical spike which may reach up to 3' in height. It has evergreen, lance-shaped, and parallel-veined leaves ranging from dark green to light yellow green in color that form a basal rosette. — Wikipedia

Habitat:

Swamp pink occurs in wetland habitats and it requires habitat which is saturated, but not flooded, with water. Ideally the plant prefers an environment where the water table sits at about the level of the top of its root system, but not covering the basal rosette. Typical areas include swampy forested wetlands which border small streams; meadows, and spring seepage areas. It is often found near conifer trees. — Wikipedia

Notes:

Swamp pink is a federally threatened species that was historically distributed from Staten Island, New York to the southern Appalachians. Currently, New Jersey supports the largest and most numerous populations, but there are populations in six other states: Delaware; Maryland; Virginia; West Virginia;North Carolina; South Carolina, and Georgia.[3][4] There is also some unverified indication that a population of swamp pink has survived on Staten Island. Populations of swamp pink are on occasion subject to poaching by plant enthusiasts and others who prize the early bright pink blooms.[5] Unfortunately, the poached plants likely do not survive their move owing to the high sensitivity to being removed from the water saturated environment, underestimation of the size of the root mass, and failure to replicate the necessary environment sufficiently. — Wikipedia

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

BonnieLewis
Spotted by
BonnieLewis

North Carolina, USA

Spotted on Apr 25, 2016
Submitted on Apr 25, 2016

Related Spottings

Pink Ladyslipper Purple milkweed Devil's Bit Swamp milkweed

Nearby Spottings

Pileated woodpecker Eastern Pondhawk American Five-lined Skink Honey mushrooms

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team