Dictionary Definition
furze n : very spiny and dense evergreen shrub
with fragrant golden-yellow flowers; common throughout western
Europe [syn: gorse,
whin, Irish gorse,
Ulex
europaeus]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- A thorny evergreen shrub (Ulex Europaeus), with beautiful yellow flowers, very common upon the plains and hills of Great Britain; -- called also gorse, and whin. The dwarf furze is Ulex nanus.
Quotations
- 1922, Virginia
Woolf, Jacob's
Room, Vintage Classics, paperback edition, page 93
- Clumps of withered grass stood out on the hill-top; the furze bushes were black, and now and then a black shiver crossed the snow as the wind drove flurries of frozen particles before it.
Synonyms
Translations
- French: ajoncs (m pl)
Extensive Definition
Gorse (Ulex) comprises a genus of about 20 species of
evergreen shrubs in the subfamily Faboideae of the
pea family Fabaceae, native
to western Europe and northwest
Africa, with
the majority of species in Iberia.
Other common names for gorse include furse, whin and furze.
Gorse is closely related to the brooms, and
like them, has green stems and very small leaves and adapts to dry
growing conditions, but differs in its extreme spininess, with the
leaves being modified into 1-4 cm long spines. All the species have
yellow flowers, some with a very long flowering season.
The most widely familiar species is the Common Gorse
(Ulex europaeus), the only species native in most of western
Europe,
where it grows in sunny sites, usually on dry, sandy soils. It is
also the largest species, reaching 2-3 m height; this compares with
typically 0.2-0.4 m for Western gorse (U. gallii). This latter
species is characteristic of highly exposed Atlantic
coastal heathland
and montane habitats.
Common gorse flowers most strongly in spring,
though it bears some flowers year round, hence the old country
phrase: "When gorse is out of blossom, kissing's out of fashion".
The flowers have a very distinctive strong coconut scent. Western gorse or
Dwarf
Furze differs in being almost entirely late summer flowering
(August-September in Ireland and
Britain),
and also have somewhat darker yellow flowers than Common
gorse.
Gorse is a fire-climax plant, very well adapted
to stand-replacing fires, being highly flammable, and having seed
pods that are to a large extent opened by fire, thus allowing rapid
regeneration after fire. The burnt stumps also readily sprout new
growth from the roots. Where fire is excluded, gorse soon tends to
be shaded out by taller-growing trees, unless other factors like
exposure also apply. Typical fire recurrence periods in gorse
stands are 5-20 years.
Gorse thrives best in poor growing areas and
conditions; it has been widely used for land reclamation (e.g.,
mine tailings), where its nitrogen-fixing
capacity helps other plants establish better.
It is a valuable plant for wildlife, providing
dense thorny cover ideal for protecting bird nests; in Britain,
France and
Ireland, it
is particularly noted for supporting European
Stonechats and Dartford
Warblers. The flowers are sometimes eaten by the larva of the Double-striped
Pug moth and another
moth, Coleophora
albicosta feeds exclusively on Ulex. In many areas of North
America, southern South
America, Australia and
New
Zealand, the Common Gorse, introduced as an ornamental
plant or hedge, has
become naturalised and an invasive
weed due to its aggressive
seed dispersal; it has proved very difficult to eradicate.
External links
- Plants for a Future, database entry on uses
- Gorse on www.the-tree.org.uk
- 'A Modern Herbal' (Grieves 1931)
- New Zealand Plants and their Story
furze in Catalan: Ulex
furze in German: Stechginster (Gattung)
furze in Spanish: Ulex
furze in Esperanto: Ulekso
furze in French: Ajonc
furze in Italian: Ulex
furze in Lithuanian: Dygliakrūmis
furze in Norwegian: Gulltorner
furze in Polish: Kolcolist
furze in Portuguese: Tojo
furze in Swedish: Ärttörnen