The sweet scent of wild bluebells wafts through Micheldever Wood, in Hampshire, at this time of year. This ancient wood, largely made up of beech trees, offers the perfect leafy cover for the native Hyacinthoides Non-scripta, as they thrive in the dappled shade on the forest floor. Bluebells are great for woodlands’ ecosystems, attracting pollinators like bees and butterflies but they are delicate and take a while to get established – so watch where you step and don’t go picking them, native wild bluebells are protected by law.
Can you tell the difference between them and the invasive Hyacinthoides hispanica, the Spanish bluebell, which was introduced to the UK in the late 17th Century? The native version’s flowers are narrow with straight sides and mostly appear on one side of the droopy stem. The Spanish variety tend to have cone shaped flowers, straight stems and flowers all the way around. And you can sniff out a native bluebell while the Spanish one has little to no smell.
Source: Bing
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