Like Indian pipes, beechdrops have none of the chlorophyll of most plants and thus are not green. |
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Appearing in late summer and fall, beechdrops are common throughout southern Ontario wherever there are beech forests. |
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The dried stems of beechdrops can often be found through the winter. |
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Like all other members of the Broom-rape family, beechdrops lacks chlorophyll and is wholly parasitic, stealing nutrients from the roots of beech trees. |
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