Mistletoe: The next sprig thing

It's almost time to get the mistletoe out again – but there's so much more to this plant than meets the eye, says Samuel Muston

Suggested Topics

Running away from over-friendly house guests wielding mistletoe is one of the great traditions of Christmas in England. But what makes this seasonal sprig so special, and why do people insist on trying to kiss us under it?

*Mistletoe is the fulcrum of an entire ecosystem. A versatile and rapacious plant, it is home to a number of invertebrates which are specially adapted to thrive on and around its surface. As well as the "kiss me slow" weevil and four other beetle species, it is also home to the mistletoe marble moth. This extremely rare insect spawns only on mistletoe plants and is subject to a government conservation plan to increase numbers.

*In England we use mistletoe to decorate our front doors, but in Austria it is used as a cancer medicine. The plant is a rich source of toxic lectin proteins (the substance that killed the Bulgarian writer Georgi Markov in the umbrella killing in 1978) which, when refined, can be injected into a patient with cancer. This solution, it is argued, stimulates the immune system into a renewed attack on the cancer cells. Although commonly used by followers of complementary medicine, its efficacy as a cancer treatment has never been satisfactorily proven.

*The mistletoe plant's white berries are a reproductive disadvantage. "The mistle thrush and black cap are the only birds in the UK which recognise the berries as food," mistletoe expert Jonathan Briggs says, "so the plant is seldom seen in areas in which these birds are not. The birds eat the white berries and then egest the seeds within them. This process usually takes place in other trees, so the mistletoe seed ends up just where it wants to be: on a tree branch."

*Mistletoe was worshipped as a divinity by early English druids. "Donning their best robes, they would climb oak trees and cut sprigs of mistletoe from their upper reaches. The sprigs would then be thrown down on to a white sheet below. It was essential, from the druids' point of view, that the berries did not touch the floor or their fertility powers would be lost. The sprig would then be hung over the door of the chief's house," Briggs says.

*"There's been a lot of re-planting of apple trees in the last decade because of booming cider sales," mistletoe auctioneer Nick Champion says. This is ideal for mistletoe, as apple trees are its favoured host tree. So drinking a pint of cider helps to ensure there is plenty of mistletoe at Christmas.

*A semi-parasitic plant, the mistletoe seeds burrow below the outer layer of bark on the host trees. The 5-10mm shoots pierce the tree's growth cells and fool them into thinking they are part of the tree itself. The mistletoe is then able to suck off such water and minerals as it requires. However, the plant can eventually become a victim of its own success. So rapacious can it become that it forces its host into a stress state, which may ultimately lead it prematurely to shed its leaves. In some instances, it pushes the tree to such an extent that it dies. Unsurprisingly, then, orchard managers often employ conservationists to trim back the mistletoe, thus ensuring both plant and tree co-exist for another season.

Independent Comment
blog comments powered by Disqus
Career Services

Day In a Page

Can we pull the plug on the plug?

Can we pull the plug on the plug?

Wireless power is beginning to surge its way into homes, businesses and garages
The 10 Best Lecture Series

The 10 Best Lecture Series

From Intelligence Squared - possibly the world's premier debating forum - to the ICA Talks
Still making a big noise: A season of Michael Frayn plays is set to reaffirm the brilliance of his work

Michael Frayn: Still making a big noise

A season of Frayn's plays is set to reaffirm the brilliance of his work
'You could have a job like mine': How successful alumni can inspire pupils

How successful alumni can inspire pupils

Hilary Wilce sees an innovative scheme in action at a London comprehensive
The tuition paradox: You pay more money, you get less choice

The tuition paradox

You pay more money, you get less choice
The rivals: Canberra's political hate story

The rivals: Canberra's political hate story

Six years ago, Kevin Rudd was ousted as Australian PM by former ally Julia Gillard. Is he about to get his revenge?
Menswear finds its swagger to escape role as poor relation of British fashion

Menswear finds its swagger...

... and escapes role as poor relation of British fashion
'There was someone who needed it...' 60 lives, 30 kidneys, all linked in longest donor chain

60 lives, 30 kidneys, all linked in longest donor chain

Organ donation to stranger starts an amazing series of events across 11 US states
The ad that only plays to women: the future of marketing or useless gimmick?

The ad that only plays to women

The future of marketing or useless gimmick?
Sam Wallace: Chelsea's class of 2012 fail to make the grade

Sam Wallace

Chelsea's class of 2012 fail to make the grade
Lewis Moody: My five ways England can bring down the red curtain

Lewis Moody column

My five ways England can bring down the red curtain
Picture preview: Charline von Heyl, Tate Liverpool

Charline von Heyl, Tate Liverpool

Picture preview
Slow progress in Christchurch one year after quake

Christchurch a year on

Residents mark the first anniversary of the earthquake
Niceness rocks! Ballads take centre stage at the Brits

Niceness rocks!

Ballads take centre stage at the Brit Awards
Robert Fisk: 'If only hague and clinton would listen to yusuf islam'

Robert Fisk

'If only Hague and Clinton would listen to Yusuf Islam'