Lords and ladies  (Arum maculatum)

Lords and ladies in flower

Facts

Also known as:wild arum and cuckoo pint
Kingdom Plantae
Phylum Anthophyta
Class Liliopsida
Order Arales
Family Araceae
Genus Arum
Size Height: 30 – 50 cm

Status

Very common in the UK

Description

Wild arum or lords and ladies (just one of this abundant plant’s local names), has a striking appearance when in flower. From amongst the shiny-green, black-speckled, arrow-shaped leaves, arises a tall slender cowl. This opens on one side to reveal a slender purple spike. This ‘spadix’ is the true flower of the wild arum, and it gave rise to another of the plant’s local names ‘cuckoo pint’. This derives from the time of the flower’s appearance – usually with the first cuckoos – whilst ‘pint’ (once pronounced to rhyme with ‘mint’) is an Old English slang for ‘pintle’, meaning penis.

Range

Lords and ladies is very common across most of the British Isles, being absent only from North Scotland. It also occurs frequently in Europe.

Habitat

This species is found in woods and along shaded ditches and hedgerows on calcareous soil.

Biology

Lords and ladies flowers in April through to May, and is a perennial, growing from a tuber underground. In autumn, it produces a cluster of dark orange berries grouped together at the top of a stem.

Wild arum is poisonous and it is better to avoid contact with it. However, in earlier times, the roots were used as a substitute for arrowroot although it has a bitter taste. The roots were more commonly used as a source of starch for collars and ruffs, even though the toxic juice left the poor laundresses’ hands terribly blistered.

Threats

Lords and ladies is a very common plant and not considered at threat.

Conservation

As this species is common across most of its range, there are currently no conservation programmes associated with it.

Information supplied by English Nature:

http://www.englishnature.org.uk/

Perennial: plants that live for at least three seasons; after an initial period they produce flowers once a year.