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Growing Wild: Lousewort and Meadow Foxtail


Catherine Keena, Teagasc Countryside Management Specialist, takes a closer look at some of our native Irish biodiversity, focusing this time on Lousewort and Meadow Foxtail.

Lousewort

Look out for lousewort, one of the positive indicator plants on the ACRES grassland and peatland scorecard, meaning that fields score higher and farmers get more money where present. It is a small, low growing plant found in damp and acidic habitats.

Lousewort

It has delicately-lobed leaves and bright pink flowers with two lips, 2.0–2.5cm long. The upper is like a hook and it is slightly longer than the bottom lip which has three lobes.

lousewort growing in its habitat

Marsh lousewort is taller and grows in slightly wetter grassland. It has very similar flowers, but its upper lip is the same length as the lower lip. Louseworts are partially parasitic plants and are part of our native Irish biodiversity.

Meadow foxtail

Look out for meadow foxtail in flower. This early flowering grass has a tight, cylindrical spike hosting many invertebrates, which in turn are prey for invertebrate eating birds. Meadow foxtail is found in old, unimproved grasslands.

Meadow foxtail flower

Seed mixtures for improved grassland will not include it and such fields are grazed or cut before grasses head out or go to seed, which is important for efficient food production. This shows the ecological benefit of retaining grass margins around improved grass fields, as well as leaving other grassy ‘waste’ areas – left unsprayed – in the countryside and delay cutting until autumn. Meadow foxtail ‘nó fiteog léana’ is part of our native Irish biodiversity.

Meadow foxtail growing in its habitat

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