this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2025
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Nature and Gardening
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They're related to blueberry, oddly enough.
I never realized they're both a part of the Ericaceae family.
It seems their relation is in part due to the blueberry plants relationship with a fungus too, albeit symbiotic. The ericoid fungi penetrates the cell walls of the plant's roots. The fungus can prevent heavy metal toxification and helps degrade organic matter for the plant to utilize.
Very interesting stuff! Source
also fun fact its pretty widespread but pretty disjunct an uncommon. they grow from the us all the way to INDIA.
theres even rare relatives like hypotitys, and HERMONITES(which are found in redwood forest) i saw one posted on reddit once. other ones include pitoyopus, the snowplant.
there was once a thismia in the america(thismiacae) in discoreales order(aka yams) in the early 1910s, but none have been found 5 years after its discovery, whats unusual its that thismia are only found in australasia region, and allegedly seperate group in the new tropics(central to south america), almost all of them are very rare. and they like the mycohetertrophs are very similar, lack cholorphyll , tiny. im fascinated by this family and related, because they keep discovering new species(mostly in asia and south america). i became fascinated by mycoheterotrophs when our plant bio lab prof showed us a picture of a snow plant(sarcodes sanguinea) he found. the sad part is on the subreddit about foraging or whatever, people are actually picking these flowers and trying to make a homeopathic tincture out of it.
Yes, to my knowledge ghost pipes were and are used to make a tincture too. It supposedly relieves pain and anxiety.
Even since I saw a picture of Sarcodes sanguinea it has been on my bucket list of plants to find in the wild. It's a beautiful plant. Unfortunately they really only show up on the upper West coast and I'm not near there.