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<strong>BSBI</strong>NEWS<br />

Edited by<br />

Leander Wolstenholme<br />

Gwynn Ellis<br />

cm.<br />

ems.<br />

Salvia sclarea L. del. G.M. Easy © 1977 (see page 49)<br />

January 2004<br />

No. 95


2 Administration and Important Addresses<br />

ADMINISTRATION AND IMPORTANT ADDRESSES<br />

PRESIDENT Mr Richard Pryce<br />

Trevethin, School Road, Pwll, Lianelli, Carmar<strong>the</strong>nshire, SA15 4AL<br />

Tel. & Fax: 01554 775847; email: PryceEco@aol.com<br />

HON. GENERAL SECRETARY (General Enquiries) BSBl<br />

c/o Dept. Botany, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD<br />

Tel.: 0207 942 5002<br />

HON. TREASURER (All financial matters except Subscriptions) Mr Michael Braithwaite<br />

19 Buccleuch Street, Hawick, Roxburghshire, TD9 OHL<br />

Tel.: 01450-372267; Fax: 01450-373591<br />

BSBl NEWS RECEIVING EDITOR Dr Leander Wolstenholme<br />

clo Botany Section, Liverpool Museum, WiIliam Brown Street, Liverpool L3 8EN<br />

Tel: 01514784278; Fax: 01514784350; email: Leander.Wolstenholme@liverpoolmuseums.org.uk<br />

BSBl NEWS GENERAL EDITOR Mr Gwynn Ellis<br />

Address, etc., as below<br />

MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY (Payment <strong>of</strong> Subs and changes <strong>of</strong> address) Mr Gwynn Ellis<br />

41 Marlborough Road, Roath, CardiffCF23 5BU<br />

Tel. & Fax: 029-2049-6042; email: rgellis@ntlworld.com<br />

(Please quote membership number on all correspondence; it is in <strong>the</strong> List <strong>of</strong> Members in Year Book 2003 or 2004,<br />

and on <strong>the</strong> address label <strong>of</strong> your mailings).<br />

HON. FIELD SECRETARY (Enquiries on Field Meetings) Mrs Jane Cr<strong>of</strong>t<br />

12 Spaldwick Road, Stow Longa, Huntingdon, Cambs. PE28 OTL<br />

Email: jane@stowlonga.fsnet.co.uk<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> PROJECT MANAGER Mr David Pearman<br />

Algiers, Feock, Truro, Cornwall, TR3 6RA<br />

Tel.: 01872 863388; email: DPearman4@aol.com<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> CO-ORDINATOR Mr Alex Lockton<br />

66 North Street, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, SYl 2JL<br />

Tel. & Fax: 01743343789; Mobile: 0585 700368; email: coordinator@bsbLorg.uk<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> VOLUNTEERS OFFICER Mr Bob Ellis<br />

11 Havelock Road, Norwich, NR2 3HQ<br />

Tel.: 01603 662260; email: bob@elymus.demon.co.uk<br />

WATSONIA RECEIVING EDITOR Mr Martin N. Sanford<br />

clo SBRC, Ipswich Museum, High Street, Ipswich, Suffolk IPl 3QH<br />

Te!': 01473 433547; fax: 01473 433558; email: sbrc@globalnet.co.uk<br />

RESEARCH FUND APPLICATIONS<br />

Mrs Sarah Whild<br />

66 North Street, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, SYl 2JL<br />

Tel. & Fax: 01743 343789; Mobile: 0585 700368; email: SJ.Whild@bham.ac.uk<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> YEAR BOOK (changes and corrections) MrGwynn Ellis<br />

Address, etc., as above<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> PUBLICATIONS<br />

Mr & Mrs Jon Atkins<br />

clo Summerfield Books, Main Street, Brough, Cumbria CA17 4AX<br />

Tel.: 017683 41577; Fax: 017683 41687; email: bsbipubs@beeb.net<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> WEB SITE ADDRESS<br />

www.bsbLorg.uk<br />

CONTRIBUTIONS INTENDED<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong>NEWS96<br />

should reach <strong>the</strong> Receiving Editor before<br />

MARCH 1 st 2004


Advertisement<br />

NATURAL WORLD TOURS<br />

For 2004 COl( & !


4 Important Notices<br />

IMPORTANT NOTICES<br />

FROM THE PRESIDENT<br />

Many <strong>of</strong> you will now be aware that Bob Ellis has been appointed to take over <strong>the</strong> Local Change<br />

scheme where Pete Selby so untimely and tragically left-<strong>of</strong>f. Pete laid <strong>the</strong> foundations <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> scheme<br />

by his enthusiasm and by becoming very knowledgeable and involved with <strong>the</strong> MapMate s<strong>of</strong>tware and<br />

encouraged <strong>the</strong> vast majority <strong>of</strong> Vice County Recorders to adopt it. He was able to customise various<br />

parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> program to meet <strong>the</strong> requirements <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> users and successfully managed to set-up <strong>the</strong><br />

exchange mechanism by which recorders and <strong>the</strong> central hubs are able to communicate. Pete was no<br />

mean field-botanist ei<strong>the</strong>r, and led many recording meetings, particularly in his home county <strong>of</strong><br />

Hampshire. He was also very keen, when he visited me in Carmar<strong>the</strong>nshire in 2002, on using his Palm<br />

computer based s<strong>of</strong>tware in <strong>the</strong> field to make recording more efficient, an aspect which I, too, am<br />

especially keen to develop in order to avoid all those evenings <strong>of</strong> data-input. He will be a difficult act<br />

to follow but Bob will be getting up to speed in <strong>the</strong> next few months and will soon be in a position to<br />

advise on progress and, no doubt, will soon be appealing to recorders to send-in <strong>the</strong>ir 2003 records.<br />

(see page 7).<br />

Bob is based in Norwich and is a nephew <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> late Ted Ellis, <strong>the</strong> celebrated Norfolk naturalist<br />

who is author <strong>of</strong> many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Jarrold photographic natural history booklets, so he comes with an<br />

impeccable pedigree! The transfer <strong>of</strong> Local Change data to him has now been completed and I am<br />

very grateful to Martin Rand for his assistance in this respect as he was able to take over Pete's<br />

machines and keep <strong>the</strong> whole scheme ticking-over. Thanks also to Alex Lockton was also involved in<br />

ensuring that all <strong>the</strong> data received during that difficult period was properly dealt-with and backed up.<br />

Fur<strong>the</strong>r amendments to MapMate are being addressed which, it is hoped, will go some way to<br />

answering <strong>the</strong> few criticisms that some users have made, principally <strong>the</strong> way in which it handles sites,<br />

which at present is not entirely compatible with <strong>the</strong> way most botanical recorders would like to see it.<br />

But <strong>the</strong> system is now in place and well proven, for recorders to transfer <strong>the</strong>ir records to Bob for<br />

processing and he should soon be able to keep us up to date with Local Change progress and be in a<br />

position to direct us to those areas which require fur<strong>the</strong>r field-work. Of course, as I wrote in my last<br />

From <strong>the</strong> President, you can get <strong>the</strong> same information by logging-on to www.<strong>BSBI</strong>-projects.org where<br />

you will find <strong>the</strong> current species-total for every Local Change tetrad and will be able to download <strong>the</strong><br />

list <strong>of</strong> species so far recorded. This is an opportunity for members to contribute new records when<br />

visiting areas away from home.<br />

The Annual Exhibition Meeting held at Baden Powell House in London on November 29 th was, as<br />

in most years, very well attended. Although <strong>the</strong> number <strong>of</strong> exhibits was somewhat down in number,<br />

<strong>the</strong> opportunity for an 'annual reunion' is probably <strong>the</strong> overwhelming reason for its popUlarity amongst<br />

members. I, for one, view it as one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most outstanding botanical social events <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year and it<br />

has stiff competition from <strong>the</strong> regional AGMs! It also gave me great pleasure to be able, for <strong>the</strong><br />

second year running, to award <strong>the</strong> prize to <strong>the</strong> top student <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year who had taken part in <strong>the</strong><br />

University Certificate in Biological Recording and Species Identification course run by <strong>the</strong> School <strong>of</strong><br />

Biosciences, University <strong>of</strong> Birmingham and jointly supported by <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> and <strong>the</strong> Field Studies<br />

Council. The winner was Jenny Ford who is employed as <strong>the</strong> County Ecologist by Wiltshire County<br />

Council and who achieved an unprecedented 100% in her marks for, not just one, but two modules <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> course!. Very warm congratulations, Jenny: I look forward to seeing you at future <strong>BSBI</strong> events.<br />

No doubt most <strong>of</strong> you were baked by <strong>the</strong> prolonged hot wea<strong>the</strong>r during <strong>the</strong> summer but, in my<br />

home county <strong>of</strong> Carmar<strong>the</strong>nshire, <strong>the</strong> Annual Recording Meeting held at Glynhir at <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> July<br />

started and ended hot and sunny but, whilst being extremely successful and enjoyable, was notable for<br />

<strong>the</strong> almost continuous rain which fell from Monday lunchtime until Thursday evening - from one<br />

extreme to <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r! Hopefully we might have better luck in 2004. So we can now look forward to<br />

recording next year, completing <strong>the</strong> fieldwork for Local Change and progressing our own particular


Important Notices / Diary 5<br />

projects. The programme set out in <strong>the</strong> Year Book includes a variety <strong>of</strong> field meetings geared to Local<br />

Change recording, monitoring well-known sites and events for recently-joined members, but above all<br />

<strong>the</strong>y will all be enjoyable and provide <strong>the</strong> opportunity for good botanising when members are able to<br />

learn from each o<strong>the</strong>r!<br />

Finally. I hope that you will all have had a pleasant Christmas and New Year and I look forward to<br />

seeing you at one or more <strong>of</strong> next season's field meetings.<br />

RICHARD PRYCE, President<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong>DEVELOPMENTFUNDAPPEAL<br />

I have great pleasure in reporting that this is proving a great success with excellent support from all<br />

round Britain and Ireland.<br />

Our <strong>BSBI</strong> Council was determined in launching this appeal that all those who give so generously<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir time (and that usually entails some pecuniary expense as well) by working in <strong>the</strong> field and in<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r ways have some pr<strong>of</strong>essional support from <strong>the</strong> centre to make <strong>the</strong>ir work more worthwhile - all<br />

without pushing up sUbscriptions unrealistically.<br />

So far about £25,000 has been raised but this is without counting <strong>the</strong> many members who have<br />

volunteered to pay a double subscription or who have promised to give additional donations in future<br />

years or to remember <strong>BSBI</strong> in <strong>the</strong>ir wills. There is additional exciting news in that we are working<br />

with five o<strong>the</strong>r individuals and trusts to firm up on <strong>of</strong>fers <strong>of</strong> very substantial donations that are likely<br />

to bring in at least a fur<strong>the</strong>r £ 1 00,000 over a period <strong>of</strong> years, subject <strong>of</strong> course to our projects going<br />

ahead.<br />

Equally importantly we can now hope to double up <strong>the</strong>se gifts with public grants for our projects.<br />

Tax recovery has been claimed on gifts from those who had previously signed Gift Aid<br />

declarations. O<strong>the</strong>r donors will have since received a Gift Aid form for completion if appropriate.<br />

As <strong>of</strong>fice bearers we have found this marvellous support very humbling and it gives us great<br />

encouragement. Deep-felt thanks are thus <strong>of</strong>fered not only to those who have supported this appeal<br />

but to those <strong>of</strong> you who continue to work so tirelessly for our <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

MICI-IAEL BRAITHWAITE, Hon. Treasurer<br />

NEW <strong>BSBI</strong> POSTCARDS<br />

We have produced a NEW set <strong>of</strong> 16 views, again from photographs kindly made available from Dr<br />

Bob Gibbons. These are <strong>the</strong> same thick card and from <strong>the</strong> same producers, Abacus <strong>of</strong> Cumbria, and<br />

reports from our recent Exhibition Meeting have been very enthusiastic!!<br />

They are available from: Mrs Margot Godfrey, 3 Castleton Avenue, Barnehurst, Kent DA7 6QT<br />

and cheques must be made payable to HER, NOT <strong>BSBI</strong>.<br />

Prices: for I pack £2.90 + 60p p&p = £3.50<br />

2 packs £5.60 + SOp p&p = £6.40<br />

3 packs £S.OO + £1 p&p = £9.00<br />

DAVID PEARMAN<br />

DIARY<br />

N.B. These dates are supplementary to those in <strong>the</strong> 2003 Calendar in <strong>BSBI</strong> Year Book 2003 and<br />

include dates <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong>'s Permanent Working Committees (more October and November dates in<br />

<strong>the</strong> next issue)


Editorial/ <strong>BSBI</strong> Volunteers Officer 7<br />

Field Studies Council: brochures for overseas tours for 2004 are available from FSC, Montfort<br />

Bridge, Shrewsbury SY4 IHW; Tel: 01743 852150, email:fsc.overseas@field-studies-council.org;<br />

www.fscOverseas.org.uk<br />

And finally: John Topp sent me a photograph <strong>of</strong> a strange Digitalis with an enormous, aberrant, terminal<br />

flower found in a London garden which I couldn't resist including in <strong>the</strong> colour section (plate I)<br />

EDITORS<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> VOLUNTEERS OFFICER<br />

[The <strong>Society</strong> was very pleased (and relieved) to have such a well-qualified replacement for Pete Selby,<br />

waiting, as it were, in <strong>the</strong> wings. Bob Ellis is our Vice-county Recorder for East Norfolk, and was <strong>the</strong><br />

runner-up at <strong>the</strong> original interview in May 2002. In view <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> time-scale <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> project, we all took<br />

<strong>the</strong> view that we could not afford <strong>the</strong> time (or expense) <strong>of</strong>re-advertising <strong>the</strong> post.]<br />

By way <strong>of</strong> introduction ...<br />

In <strong>the</strong> wake <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> sad loss <strong>of</strong>Pete Selby, I have recently been appointed as Volunteers Officer. As I<br />

endeavour to get to grips with <strong>the</strong> role, I have come to realise just how great Pete's contribution was<br />

and how well he made it. I doubt I'll be able to match his skill or enthusiasm but I will do my best. If<br />

I can be <strong>of</strong> help in any way, please do not hesitate to contact me and, as Pete would have said, 'remember<br />

that it is my job to help you'.<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> Local Change<br />

Progress with <strong>BSBI</strong> Local Change continues apace, with records flowing into <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> Hub database,<br />

but at <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> writing, I suspect <strong>the</strong>re are many more records still to come in from 2003 fieldwork.<br />

Therefore, it is difficult to identifY all those areas in need <strong>of</strong> extra effort. However, by <strong>the</strong> time this<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> News lands on your doorstep, <strong>the</strong> picture should be much clearer.<br />

May I remind you <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> Projects web site at www.bsbi-projects.org where you can check on<br />

<strong>the</strong> progress in any particular tetrad in any vice-county, so I you are thinking <strong>of</strong> recording whilst on<br />

holiday in a different part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> country you can pin-point useful areas to visit. Alternatively contact<br />

me and I will be able to make some suggestions for you.<br />

If you are not already involved in <strong>the</strong> Local Change project and would like to join in, <strong>the</strong>re are<br />

several ways you could help:<br />

Record one or more tetrads in your area and perhaps take along someone else, whe<strong>the</strong>r experienced<br />

or not, to help share your botanical skills. It is best to contact your local vice-county recorder or<br />

me in order to avoid any duplication <strong>of</strong> effort.<br />

Join with a local group that is recording in your area. Again contact your local vice-county<br />

recorder or get in touch with me.<br />

Attend one or more <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> field meetings in Scotland, organised specifically for Local Change<br />

recording. These are listed briefly here, but please check <strong>the</strong> Year Book for full details.<br />

19 th & 20 th June: Craik Forest, Ettrick Valley & The Moorfoots, Selkirks<br />

26 th June: Loch Katrine, West Perthshire<br />

3,d to 5 th July: Islay & Jura, South Ebudes<br />

7th to 9 th July: Golspie, East Su<strong>the</strong>rland<br />

17th & 18 th July: Pitlochry, Mid Perthshire<br />

24th & 25 th July: Castle Douglas, Kirkcudbrightshire<br />

6 th to 8 th August: Inverpolly, Loch Ewe & Loch Duich, West Ross<br />

There may be fur<strong>the</strong>r Local Change meetings arranged during <strong>the</strong> year and if you would like me to<br />

keep you informed <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se please let me know.<br />

BOB ELL/S, <strong>BSBI</strong> Volunteers Officer, 11 Havelock Road, Norwich, NR2 3HQ; Tel.: 01603 662260;<br />

Email: VolunteersOfficer@bsbLorg.uk


8 Co-ordinator's Corner<br />

CO-ORDINATOR'S CORNER<br />

Countryside matters<br />

I noticed a curious thing this last summer. Lots <strong>of</strong> arable fields around this part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> country now<br />

have wide conservation headlands, and I was struck by <strong>the</strong> fact that <strong>the</strong>se headlands really seem to<br />

work. Where <strong>the</strong> fields abut rivers and meres <strong>the</strong>re always used to be dense stands <strong>of</strong> nettles and o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

nitrophilous species. This year <strong>the</strong> nettle beds seemed markedly thinner. I would be amazed if<br />

something as simple as a five metre wide buffer strip could not just halt eutrophication but actually<br />

reverse it to <strong>the</strong> extent that nettles, once established, went into decline. I wonder if anyone has seen<br />

similar results elsewhere?<br />

The whole science <strong>of</strong> monitoring <strong>the</strong> effect <strong>of</strong> management policy on <strong>the</strong> countryside is still in its<br />

infancy. About five years ago <strong>the</strong> agricultural people started to get interested in arable conservation,<br />

but <strong>the</strong>y decided to use a short list <strong>of</strong> incredibly rare species as <strong>the</strong> benchmark <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir success. In<br />

discussions with people from Defra this year it has transpired that none <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se species has ever been<br />

found in land within <strong>the</strong>ir stewardship scheme, so as far as <strong>the</strong>ir monitoring process goes <strong>the</strong> whole<br />

thing has been a failure. But in fact it clearly hasn't. If <strong>the</strong>re is one thing that arable extensification<br />

can do for nature conservation, it is to control and ultimately reduce eutrophication. But how do we<br />

measure that? The best way is through large-scale programmes like <strong>the</strong> Countryside Survey and <strong>BSBI</strong><br />

Local Change, which will pick up such effects in time. Concentrating on vanishingly rare weeds has<br />

been a silly outcome <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Biodiversity Action Plan and needs some serious rethinking.<br />

Ano<strong>the</strong>r pleasing change in <strong>the</strong> countryside is <strong>the</strong> control <strong>of</strong> alders by Alder Pox (Phytophthora<br />

cambivora), which causes dieback in <strong>the</strong> crowns particularly <strong>of</strong> riverside plants. I shall probably get<br />

hate mail for saying this, as our modem sense <strong>of</strong> hygiene makes people uncomfortable with <strong>the</strong> idea <strong>of</strong><br />

letting diseases run free, but think about it for a moment: over <strong>the</strong> last fifty years or so our<br />

abandonment <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> management <strong>of</strong> waterside habitats, possibly compounded by eutrophication, has<br />

led to a plague <strong>of</strong> alders along watercourses throughout <strong>the</strong> lowlands. Whenever a species becomes<br />

too abundant it inevitably becomes vulnerable, and in this case <strong>the</strong> agent <strong>of</strong> population control is a<br />

fungus. Our instinctive and prejudiced reaction is to try to eradicate <strong>the</strong> disease because disease is, by<br />

definition, 'bad'. Happily it has not worked and as a result a lot <strong>of</strong> watercourses are being opened up<br />

to <strong>the</strong> sunlight again, which is just what <strong>the</strong> water plants needed.<br />

I wonder if we will ever learn to study natural cycles before we rush in to take control <strong>of</strong> every<br />

aspect <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> natural environment? Will we ever hear conservation organisations argue for patience<br />

and research? I think <strong>the</strong>re is going to have to be a change in <strong>the</strong> philosophy <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> nature conservation<br />

sector over <strong>the</strong> next few years, as people realise that <strong>the</strong> biodiversity industry isn't really about nature<br />

conservation at all - it is about jobs and money and manipulation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> environment for political<br />

targets. In that respect, it is just ano<strong>the</strong>r form <strong>of</strong> development.<br />

Conservation battlegrounds<br />

On <strong>the</strong> whole, <strong>the</strong> conservation sector seems very pleased with itself <strong>the</strong>se days. It has grown<br />

exponentially in <strong>the</strong> last few years and, according to <strong>the</strong>ir own publicity, <strong>the</strong> half dozen or so leading<br />

conservation charities in Britain now have a turnover <strong>of</strong> nearly a billion pounds a year. But what<br />

puzzles me is <strong>the</strong> battles that we seem to be losing. Take Aucheninnies Moss in Kirkcudbrightshire.<br />

It is scheduled to be used as a landfill site, even though lowland mires are one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most high-pr<strong>of</strong>ile<br />

habitats for nature conservation. It is apparently <strong>the</strong> only site in Scotland for <strong>the</strong> bog bush cricket<br />

(Metrioptera brachyptera) and it has never been given a thorough botanical survey. But SNH seem<br />

happy to let it go without a fight, and you won't hear <strong>the</strong> well-funded campaigning groups putting up<br />

much <strong>of</strong> a fuss - it has been left to <strong>the</strong> traditional efforts <strong>of</strong> local protestors to make a stand. Has all<br />

this money turned <strong>the</strong>m s<strong>of</strong>t? Surely using peat bogs for landfill is <strong>the</strong> sort <strong>of</strong> thing that should not be<br />

happening anymore?<br />

Ano<strong>the</strong>r battle is over <strong>the</strong> Montgomery Canal, which I have mentioned before. This canal has been<br />

a SSSI since before <strong>the</strong> modem leisure boating movement was formed and it is now a candidate SAC.


Co-ordinator's Corner / Recorders and Recording 9<br />

<strong>British</strong> Waterways has proven that <strong>the</strong>ir measures to conserve plants in channel do not work (despite<br />

that being <strong>the</strong> reason <strong>the</strong>y were allowed to redevelop SSSIs), so <strong>the</strong>y now propose to create ponds and<br />

transplant all <strong>the</strong> rarities. Meanwhile <strong>the</strong> JNCC has produced guidelines which acknowledge that<br />

translocations do not work and should not be used as a mitigation measure. So, what is <strong>the</strong> response <strong>of</strong><br />

CCW? They say that <strong>the</strong> redevelopment <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> canal was agreed twenty years ago and <strong>the</strong>y can't stop<br />

it. All <strong>the</strong>y can do is hope that <strong>the</strong> National Lottery runs out <strong>of</strong> money and cannot afford to pay for it.<br />

It does not strike me as a very robust approach.<br />

What puzzles me is why no-one can even think <strong>of</strong> compromise. There is nothing wrong with<br />

people running <strong>the</strong>ir boats up and down canals - that is <strong>the</strong>ir natural function. The only problem is<br />

that canals are bridleways, not motorways, and <strong>the</strong>y simply can't cope with HGVs. Get some sort <strong>of</strong><br />

propulsion mechanism that doesn't involve underwater propellers and <strong>the</strong> problem is practically<br />

solved. If farmers can achieve such success with a few metres <strong>of</strong> headland <strong>the</strong>n surely boat owners can<br />

compromise in some way. After all, nei<strong>the</strong>r group actively dislikes wildlife - <strong>the</strong>y just don't<br />

understand it. I suggest an overhead cable to tow <strong>the</strong> barges along by. You would think that within a<br />

billion pound budget <strong>the</strong>re might be room for <strong>the</strong> development <strong>of</strong> such a thing. If it could be done,<br />

<strong>the</strong>n all <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r canals in Britain would have a chance <strong>of</strong> returning to <strong>the</strong>ir former glory.<br />

Threatened Plants Database<br />

Please continue to send in records. The main species I am working on at <strong>the</strong> moment are Nor<strong>the</strong>rn<br />

Hawk's-beard (Crepis mollis), Purple Ramping-fumitory (Fumaria purpurea), Bog Orchid (Hammarbya<br />

paludosa), Red Hemp-nettle (Galeopsis angustifolia), Grasswrack Pondweed (Potamogeton<br />

compressus), Floating Water-plantain (Luronium natans) and Pennyroyal (Mentha pulegium), but a<br />

full list is available at www.tpdb.org. They are all fascinating plants. Last year Peter Sibley, from <strong>the</strong><br />

Environment Agency, found Grasswrack Pondweed in <strong>the</strong> River Trent, which raises <strong>the</strong> awful<br />

(wonderful!) possibility that it is still hiding in rivers throughout England. Underwater plants in small<br />

quantities would be almost impossible to find and identify. Kate Thorne found Floating Waterplantain<br />

in abundance in an area <strong>of</strong> farmland - an entirely new habitat for it that will require <strong>the</strong><br />

textbooks to be rewritten. Pennyroyal was found by Gill Gent and Rob Wilson in vast quantities in<br />

new sites along <strong>the</strong> River Nene and by various o<strong>the</strong>r people along Roman roads. This plant is not<br />

decreasing at all - it is expanding its range and thriving. I should congratulate Lee Thickett on his<br />

discoveries <strong>of</strong> new sites for Bog Orchid, and John Edgington for one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> best finds <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year­<br />

Alpine Fleabane (Erigeron borealis) at an entirely new site. Sarah Whild deserves a mention for<br />

refinding Purple Ramping-fumitory in its home town <strong>of</strong> Shrewsbury, and Hea<strong>the</strong>r McHaffie for several<br />

new Scottish sites. Please don't forget to send specimens <strong>of</strong> this to Tim Rich, preferably with permission<br />

to retain <strong>the</strong>m at <strong>the</strong> National Museum <strong>of</strong> Wales. We especially need specimens from Lancashire,<br />

where it is alleged to be quite common, but thorough searches by Gail Quartly-Bishop were only<br />

successful in <strong>the</strong> one well-known site where it has been known for decades.<br />

ALEx LocKToN, 66 North Street, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, SYI 2JL; alex@whildassociates.co.uk;<br />

coordinator@bsbi.org.uk<br />

RECORDERS AND RECORDING<br />

PANEL OF REFEREES AND SPECIALISTS<br />

As usual <strong>the</strong>re have been a number <strong>of</strong> changes <strong>of</strong> address in <strong>the</strong> Referees Section, and more Referees<br />

now have email addresses. Please could Referees let me know <strong>of</strong> address changes, and I would be<br />

glad to know if o<strong>the</strong>rs would like <strong>the</strong>ir email addresses included.<br />

The death <strong>of</strong> Franklyn Perring has been announced elsewhere; as Referee he was covering<br />

Anagallis, Arctium, Symphytum and 'popular names' and will be much missed in this connection, as in<br />

so many o<strong>the</strong>rs.<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>essor David Moore, Viola Referee, has said that he would like to retire, and we are pleased to<br />

welcome his replacement, Mike Hardman.


10 Recorders and Recording<br />

We welcome also Paul Green (Allium), Rose Murphy (Oeno<strong>the</strong>ra), and Andrew Norton<br />

(Geranium).<br />

MARY CLARE SHEAHAN, 61 Westmoreland Road, Bames, London SW13 9RZ.<br />

email: m.sheahan@rbgkew.org.uk<br />

PANEL OF VICE-COUNTY RECORDERS<br />

Members will receive a full listing with <strong>the</strong> new Year Book 2004, but it might be useful to give <strong>the</strong><br />

recent changes.<br />

V.c.7 N. Wilts: Vacant<br />

Dave Green has been recorder since 1982, and helped greatly in <strong>the</strong> recording, culminating<br />

in <strong>the</strong> new Flora in 1993. We thank him very much for his efforts.<br />

V.c.88 Mid Perth: Mr J.W. McIntosh, 611, 53 Hutcheson Street, Glasgow, Gl ISJ and Mr A.C.<br />

Godfrey, 18 1sla Road, Luncart, Perthshire, PHI 3HN, to be joint recorders. Corresponence<br />

to Mr McIntosh. We thank Dr R.E. Thomas, recorder since 1981, for all his work in such a<br />

rich and vast vice-county.<br />

V.c.92 S. Aberdeen: Dr R.J. Mitchell, Eastview Cottage, Woodside Road, Torphins, Banchory,<br />

Kincardines, AB31 4JR. We thank Kathy Fallowfield, recorder since 1994, for all her<br />

work in ano<strong>the</strong>r vice-county that is dauting in its richness and difficulty <strong>of</strong> access.<br />

V.c.97 Westemess: Mr 1.R. Bonner to be joint recorder. Correspondence, as before, to Dr 1.<br />

Strachan.<br />

V.c. 102 S. Ebudes: Dr M.A. Ogilvie, Glencaim, Bruichladdich, Isle <strong>of</strong>Islay, Argyll, PA49 7UN.<br />

We thank Richard Gulliver, recorder since 1993, for his help since that data.<br />

V.c.106 E. Ross: Drs B.R. & C.B. Ballinger, 5 Shaftsbury Park, Dundee, DD2 ILB. Mrs R. Scott<br />

to continue as joint recorder, but correspondence to <strong>the</strong> Ballantynes. Peter Wortham,<br />

recorder since 1994, retires, and we thank him for his work, especially for <strong>the</strong> New Atlas.<br />

DAVID PEARMAN, Algiers, Feock, Truro, Cornwall TR3 6RA; Tel: 01872 863388<br />

PLANT RECORDS FOR WATSONIA AND THE VICE-COUNTY CENSUS<br />

CATALOGUE<br />

The criteria for submission <strong>of</strong> records for Watsonia have been completely revised following publication<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Vice-county Census Catalogue (VCCC), so that Plant Records becomes <strong>the</strong> formal way <strong>of</strong><br />

updating <strong>the</strong> Census Catalogue, and a source <strong>of</strong> information on new records <strong>of</strong> rare and scarce species.<br />

At present barely half <strong>of</strong> Vice-county Recorders (VCRs) regularly publish new records (<strong>of</strong> species,<br />

subspecies and hybrids) in Watsonia. It is really important that in future VCRs submit records, not<br />

only to keep <strong>the</strong> VCCC updated, but also to make Watsonia records more meaningful. Submission <strong>of</strong><br />

such records will <strong>the</strong>refore be requested as part <strong>of</strong> with <strong>the</strong> annual report on records referred to above.<br />

We would like VCRs to use <strong>the</strong> following criteria for what records to submit as VCCC updates for<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir vice-county:<br />

First record <strong>of</strong> all taxa (species, subspecies and hybrids) included in <strong>the</strong> VCCC, designated as<br />

native, archaeophyte, neophyte or casual.<br />

First record since 1970 <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> taxa above.<br />

Records demonstrating <strong>the</strong> rediscovery <strong>of</strong> all taxa published as extinct in <strong>the</strong> VCCC or<br />

subsequently.<br />

• Newly reported definite extinctions. (Not simply 'not seen for ten years'.)<br />

Deletions from <strong>the</strong> VCCC (e.g. through <strong>the</strong> discovery <strong>of</strong> errors, <strong>the</strong> redetermination <strong>of</strong> specimens,<br />

etc.). [NB - only those errors affecting VCCC entry].


Recorders and Recording 11<br />

Please note <strong>the</strong> quite radical changes to <strong>the</strong> pre-VCCC criteria, including <strong>the</strong> inclusion <strong>of</strong> all casuals<br />

listed in <strong>the</strong> VCCC, some <strong>of</strong> which should previously have been published in <strong>BSBI</strong> News.<br />

In addition, we would like VCRs to submit:<br />

New 10km square records for Rare and Scarce plants, defined, for <strong>the</strong> moment, as those species in <strong>the</strong><br />

New Atlas mapped in Britain in 100 10km squares or less.<br />

We must collect records <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se to make certain we know <strong>the</strong> real distribution and to help keep<br />

<strong>the</strong> TPDB up to date.<br />

All critical taxa should, <strong>of</strong> course, be determined or confirmed by an acknowledged_expert. This is<br />

currently a problem for Hieracium.<br />

The history <strong>of</strong> botany has been littered with erroneous or dubious records and recorders are asked<br />

to make every effort to ensure accuracy <strong>of</strong> completed individual record cards (IRCs). In case Of doubt<br />

on determinations refer to <strong>the</strong> appropriate <strong>BSBI</strong> referee or to BRC. At least 6 figure grid references<br />

should be provided and notes on actual location <strong>of</strong> plants to guide future monitoring should be written<br />

on <strong>the</strong> back <strong>of</strong>IRCs.<br />

New guidelines for Irish VCRs are currently in <strong>the</strong> process <strong>of</strong> being drawn up by <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> Irish<br />

Committee in consultation with Records Committee and o<strong>the</strong>r interested parties.<br />

GWYNN ELLls, Editor Plant Notes<br />

BEYOND TRAINSPOTTING<br />

At <strong>the</strong> recent Scottish meeting it was suggested that it is time for us to move beyond 'trainspotting',<br />

that as recorders we can and should do more than simply tick <strong>the</strong> register - present or absent. This is<br />

a view I share, and as a positive step towards its implementation, I am setting out here two suggestions<br />

<strong>of</strong> how we might do more, which I propose to employ experimentally during <strong>the</strong> coming season. I<br />

invite o<strong>the</strong>rs to do <strong>the</strong> same, and hope that on this basis discussion may be carried forward and a more<br />

adequate data collection system put in place.<br />

Useful as it is to know that a taxon has been found or not found at a given site, this information is<br />

so much less than what might be recorded without any additional fieldwork, that it represents a<br />

squandering <strong>of</strong> effort and resources. In <strong>the</strong> course <strong>of</strong> several hours recording a site, km square or<br />

tetrad, we actually acquire a great deal <strong>of</strong> valuable information that at present never finds its way on to<br />

our record card. We observe, for instance, that some species occur as scattered individuals in suitable<br />

locations, o<strong>the</strong>rs in colonies large or small, while yet o<strong>the</strong>rs are frequent in many kinds <strong>of</strong> habitat. We<br />

make a few notes on rare and unusual taxa, but for <strong>the</strong> rest our record sheet preserves no indication <strong>of</strong><br />

whe<strong>the</strong>r one, ten or ten thousand specimens were present, and if in one locality or many.<br />

My first suggestion is to use an AFOR scale (abundant, frequent, occasional, rare). Towards <strong>the</strong><br />

end <strong>of</strong> each session, it would take only a few minutes to write <strong>the</strong> appropriate letter beside each taxon<br />

which has been stroked through, or cards could be designed with four boxes after each taxon name, in<br />

which case only a tick would be needed. Cards scored in this way would be <strong>of</strong> much enhanced value:<br />

for instance, in assessing <strong>the</strong> health <strong>of</strong> a hectad population, <strong>the</strong> information that <strong>the</strong> species was<br />

frequent in three sample tetrads would be more significant than merely knowing that it was present<br />

<strong>the</strong>re. In repeat surveys such as <strong>BSBI</strong> Local Change, <strong>the</strong> additional information would be <strong>of</strong> great<br />

value and would provide a much more sensitive barometer <strong>of</strong> population change. It would no longer<br />

be necessary to await total extinction in a tetrad, or worse hectad, before alarm bells could be sounded.<br />

Of course; <strong>the</strong>re is always an element <strong>of</strong> subjectivity in drawing <strong>the</strong> lines between categories, but<br />

guidelines could be <strong>of</strong>fered, and in any case differences should even out when data is pooled.<br />

However, an AFOR type scale has serious limitations. As Rodwell remarked, its 'inherent<br />

confusion <strong>of</strong> ... abundance and frequency' made it unsuitable for NVC work. Ideally, we should aim<br />

to record both <strong>the</strong>se variables, <strong>the</strong>reby allowing a distinction between (e.g.) well scattered individuals<br />

and a couple <strong>of</strong> dense colonies, both <strong>of</strong> which might score Occasional on <strong>the</strong> AFOR scale. There are<br />

two axes, one from local to general within <strong>the</strong> entire site being recorded, <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r from scarce to


12 Recorders and Recording / Notes and Articles<br />

abundant in <strong>the</strong> locality where <strong>the</strong> plant occurs. If <strong>the</strong> status <strong>of</strong> a species in both <strong>the</strong>se respects can be<br />

recorded, <strong>the</strong> value <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> record is hugely increased. The problem is how to convey a useful level <strong>of</strong><br />

information without undue complexity in observation or recording. Three categories on each axis are<br />

probably sufficient, and may be most conveniently expressed by adding a code letter and number after<br />

<strong>the</strong> taxon. I suggest <strong>the</strong> following categories provisionally, <strong>the</strong>y may require tweaking after trials.<br />

Frequency:<br />

A >20%<br />

B >1%<br />

C


Notes and Articles 13<br />

Erica lusitanica (POliuguese Heath) has long inhabited a Cornish railway line and was naturalised for<br />

more than a century on Lychett Heath in Dorset, although I am uncertain whe<strong>the</strong>r it is still found <strong>the</strong>re<br />

- McClintock reported in <strong>the</strong> 1964 Yearbook o/The Hea<strong>the</strong>r <strong>Society</strong> that 'it was all but eradicated by<br />

fire not long ago', while 30 years later Gust a decade ago) E.J. Clement and M.C. Foster (Alien plants<br />

o/<strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. 1994) wrote that <strong>the</strong> population was 'now much reduced or gone'. Erica terminalis<br />

(Corsican Heath) has been known from a site in Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Ireland for at least a century (where I saw it<br />

in <strong>the</strong> mid-1970s), and is also recorded from three vice-counties in Britain: Berkshire, Dorset and<br />

Westerness.<br />

The fourth map on <strong>the</strong> CD-ROM is for E. xdarleyensis (E. carnea x E. erigena) (DarJey Dale<br />

Heath), a hOliicultural hybrid unknown in <strong>the</strong> wild because <strong>the</strong> parent species have widely separated<br />

natural ranges. In <strong>British</strong> gardens E. carnea and E. erigena can cross spontaneously and that was <strong>the</strong><br />

origin <strong>of</strong> E. xdarleyensis - a chance seedling in Smith's nursery at Darley Dale in Derbyshire. At<br />

least 36 distinct, named cultivars have existed - 26 <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se are commercially available today -<br />

according to <strong>the</strong> database maintained by The Hea<strong>the</strong>r <strong>Society</strong> for its International register <strong>of</strong> hea<strong>the</strong>r<br />

names. Recently, deliberate breeding programmes using carefully selected cultivars as pollen- and<br />

seed-parents have produced a crop <strong>of</strong> new seedlings, so <strong>the</strong> cadastre <strong>of</strong> named cultivars will<br />

undoubtedly increase.<br />

Erica xdarleyensis is a very popular and widely cultivated plant, but it is sterile and none <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

cultivars has produced viable seed as far as I can ascertain. Moreover, it does not spread in gardens by<br />

self-layering - although some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> cultivars do form mats, few if any <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> stems will have<br />

adventitious roots. Given <strong>the</strong>se characteristics, suggesting a plant incapable <strong>of</strong> 'jumping <strong>the</strong> garden<br />

wall', how do we explain <strong>the</strong> swarm <strong>of</strong> 18 10krn squares across sou<strong>the</strong>rn England? Are <strong>the</strong>y all records<br />

<strong>of</strong> deliberately planted, but persistent plants? In one instance that is certainly <strong>the</strong> case. In <strong>the</strong> 1930s E.<br />

xdarleyensis was planted outside Notcutts' Nursery at Woodbridge in East Suffolk, but when <strong>the</strong> AI2<br />

was re-routed this hea<strong>the</strong>r 'plantation' was virtually destroyed, although an old plant did persist <strong>the</strong>re<br />

for many years. As far as I can ascertain this plant has long since vanished and, contrary to what Clive<br />

Stace (New flora o/<strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. 1991) stated, <strong>the</strong>re is no E. xdarleyensis on <strong>the</strong> side <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> AI2 at<br />

Woodbridge today. That leaves 17 squares, one <strong>of</strong> which presumably is <strong>the</strong> record cited by Clement<br />

and Foster (1994) for Brookwood Cemetery, Surrey - not a record I would regard as admissible<br />

unless <strong>the</strong> hea<strong>the</strong>r has escaped beyond <strong>the</strong> cemetery's boundaries. Indeed, it is ra<strong>the</strong>r suspicious that<br />

E. carnea is also recorded by Clement and Foster (1994) from Brookwood Cemetery, making <strong>the</strong> place<br />

sound more like a well-planted hea<strong>the</strong>r garden than a veritable 'wild' site. (The question <strong>of</strong> when a<br />

plant becomes a naturalised alien is ano<strong>the</strong>r subjectt)<br />

The enigma <strong>of</strong> E. xdarleyensis is compounded by <strong>the</strong> fact that <strong>the</strong>re is no map on <strong>the</strong> CD-ROM<br />

showing <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> naturalised populations <strong>of</strong> E. carnea (Winter Heath) in Britain although<br />

this widely cultivated and equally popular hea<strong>the</strong>r is recorded by Clement and Foster (1994) as<br />

'persistent on Apple Tree Banks' on Tresco, on Dartford Heath, and at Churt and <strong>the</strong> aforementioned<br />

cemetery in Surrey. Nei<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> 1991 edition <strong>of</strong>Clive Stace's New flora nor his 1999 Fieldflora o/<strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> has an entry for E. carnea.<br />

I suggest that <strong>the</strong> enigma <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 16 inexplicable squares for a hea<strong>the</strong>r incapable <strong>of</strong> producing<br />

seeds and ra<strong>the</strong>r less prone to vegetative spread than Stace suggests is a matter <strong>of</strong> identification.<br />

Few hea<strong>the</strong>r experts, whe<strong>the</strong>r nurserymen, gardeners or botanists, given pressed specimens <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se<br />

plants, or even fresh specimens plucked from unseen plants, can distinguish between E. carnea and<br />

E. xdarleyensis, and even telling E. carnea apart from E. erigena takes a great deal <strong>of</strong> blind faith.<br />

In gardens at least, a good (but not utterly reliable) rule-<strong>of</strong>-thumb is that hybrids between Erica<br />

species usually have non-green (coloured) young growth (see colour section, plate 2) during late<br />

Spring-early Summer. The following clones are just four examples <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> so-called Spring-tipped<br />

hybrid hea<strong>the</strong>rs: E. xdarleyensis 'Furzey', pink tips; E. xstuartii 'Irish Orange', orange tips; E.<br />

xwatsonii 'Dawn', red tips; E. x williamsii 'Cow-y-jack', bright yellow tips. The last three are<br />

wild-collected, native clones.


14 Notes and Articles<br />

Thus a key to E. carnea, E. xdarleyensis and E. erigena could be as follows:<br />

la Plants with stiffly erect stems, fOlming bushy shrubs with several, distinct main stems,<br />

to at least 0.75(-3)m tall; foliage green all year round erigena<br />

1 b Plants with numerous decumbent or ascending shoots, without distinct, main stems,<br />

rarely more than 0.6m tall (usually lower when growing in open ground) 2<br />

2a Foliage green all year round; shoots usually decumbent (pollen fertile) carnea<br />

2b Young shoot-tips not green, <strong>of</strong>ten brightly tinged red, yellow or cream; shoots ascending<br />

or decumbent (pollen infertile) xdarleyensis<br />

While it would be nice and convenient to have a few good morphological characters to denote <strong>the</strong><br />

differences between E. carnea and E. xdarleyensis, it is apparent that <strong>the</strong> only reliable way <strong>of</strong> distinguishing<br />

<strong>the</strong>m is to examine <strong>the</strong>ir pollen. With one ra<strong>the</strong>r rare exception, <strong>the</strong> pollen grains <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> cultivars<br />

<strong>of</strong> E. xdarleyensis are reported to be shrunken and infertile. Telling E. carnea and E. erigena<br />

apart, when <strong>the</strong>se are presented as detached specimens, is if anything even more difficult because both<br />

have fertile pollen.<br />

E. CHARLES NELSON, (Cultivar Registrar, The Hea<strong>the</strong>r <strong>Society</strong>) Tippitiwitchet Cottage, Hall Road,<br />

Outwell, Wisbech, PE14 8PE; Email: tippitiwitchet@zetnet.co.uk or registrar@zetnet.co.uk<br />

FLORAL ABBERA TIONS<br />

The recent correspondence regarding double-flowered forms <strong>of</strong> Cardamine pratensis (Cucko<strong>of</strong>lower)<br />

reminds me <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> only occasion when I have seen this aberration. This was about 60 years ago when I<br />

found <strong>the</strong> fully double form at <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> a hill at Barby in Northamptonshire, in a field where stood <strong>the</strong><br />

remains <strong>of</strong> an old windmill (GR SP542697). After this length <strong>of</strong> time I cannot remember whe<strong>the</strong>r<br />

<strong>the</strong>re were o<strong>the</strong>r similar plants.<br />

Years later I found a fully double form <strong>of</strong> Helian<strong>the</strong>mum nummularium (Common Rock-rose) on<br />

Ivinghoe Beacon. I took a cutting from this and cultivated it for many years in my garden at Little<br />

Hallingbury. It was never a vigorous plant. I have also cultivated a fully double form <strong>of</strong> Ranunculus<br />

bulbosus (Bulbous Buttercup) given to me and taken from a road verge in Farnham Lane near Bishop's<br />

Stortford. In <strong>the</strong> 1960s I discovered a form <strong>of</strong> Ranunculus acris (Meadow Buttercup) with green<br />

petals at <strong>the</strong> foot <strong>of</strong> Brean Down in Somerset (see Colour Section, plate 3).<br />

JOHN FIELDING, 19 Dane Acres, Bishop'S Stortford, Herts. CM23 2PX<br />

DROUGHT RESISTANT RANUNCULUS FICARIA?<br />

In May this year I noticed Ranunculus ficaria (Lesser Celandine) growing in sandy soil just above <strong>the</strong><br />

littoral zone on <strong>the</strong> foreshore north <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Highland boundary fault, north <strong>of</strong> Stonehaven. The<br />

surrounding vegetation was brown and parched whereas <strong>the</strong> plants <strong>of</strong> R. ficaria appeared lush, green<br />

and healthy. This and <strong>the</strong> high levels <strong>of</strong> salinity surrounding <strong>the</strong> plants made me wonder whe<strong>the</strong>r this<br />

is an example <strong>of</strong> a variant designed to cope with physiological drought. Do members have any ideas?<br />

A. MURRAY, 15 Deevale Gardens, Aberdeen, AB12 5PB<br />

A SINGULARLY DOUBLE FORM OF CARDAMINE PRA TENS/S<br />

I have been .very interested in <strong>the</strong> various articles you have printed on double forms <strong>of</strong> Lady's Smock,<br />

from various parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> country, and this reminded me <strong>of</strong> a very peculiar mutant form that I found<br />

back in <strong>the</strong> 1960s in Somerset, when I was at <strong>the</strong> Botany Dept at Bristol University. The plant was<br />

growing with normal individuals in a damp meadow, but I could at once see that <strong>the</strong>re was something<br />

unusual about <strong>the</strong> flowers. On closer inspection, some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flowers appeared to be quite normal,<br />

while o<strong>the</strong>rs, on <strong>the</strong> same stem, consisted <strong>of</strong> a mass <strong>of</strong> petals and no sexual organs. However, when I<br />

examined <strong>the</strong> latter in detail, I realised <strong>the</strong>se were just a later developmental stage <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 'normal'


Notes and Articles 15<br />

flowers. The flower buds opened to reveal a single flower, with a normal androecium and gynoecium.<br />

However, after <strong>the</strong> petals dropped, <strong>the</strong> ovary, instead <strong>of</strong> developing into <strong>the</strong> usual elongate siliqua,<br />

began to swell in <strong>the</strong> middle, eventually bursting open at one side to reveal a large number <strong>of</strong> more or<br />

less perfectly formed petals. At this stage <strong>the</strong>se flowers looked at first glance like any o<strong>the</strong>r double<br />

flowers! I was so interested in <strong>the</strong> plant that I removed it to <strong>the</strong> Experimental Glasshouse, at <strong>the</strong><br />

University, where it thrived for a few years. Unfortunately I no longer recall <strong>the</strong> exact locality where I<br />

originally found it, though I returned on several occasions to see if <strong>the</strong>re were o<strong>the</strong>r similar individuals,<br />

but without success. This really was a double flower, as it produced two flowers from <strong>the</strong> same bud! I<br />

wonder if anyone else has encountered anything similar?<br />

RAy HARLEY, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, Richmond, Surrey TW9 SAB<br />

COASTAL EL YTRIGIA SPECIES AND HYBRIDS IN NORTH-WESTERN<br />

ENGLAND AND NORTHERN WALES<br />

Introduction<br />

Over <strong>the</strong> last thirty five years vascular plant records have been ga<strong>the</strong>red on a tetrad basis in West<br />

Lancaster (v.c. 60). In <strong>the</strong> course <strong>of</strong> this work it became clear that one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most common upper<br />

marsh species was what was thought to be Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica (Sea Couch) (Fig. 1, below).<br />

Figure I. Tetrad distribution map <strong>of</strong> what was thought to be Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica on <strong>the</strong> coast <strong>of</strong> West<br />

Lancaster, v.c. 60 compiled from records collected 1964 - 1998. It probably shows <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong><br />

somewhat glaucous Elytrigia taxa, mostly E. xoliveri but also <strong>of</strong> E. xobtusiuscula, E. xlaxa and<br />

. E. repens. E. a<strong>the</strong>rica is absent.<br />

Map prepared using Alan Morton's DMAP programme.<br />

However Halliday (1997), having had material from Cumbria critically checked by Dr T.A. Cope,<br />

found that what was thought to be Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica was <strong>the</strong> male sterile hybrid Elytrigia xoliveri<br />

(E. repens x E. a<strong>the</strong>rica). This prompted a more detailed investigation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> supposed E. a<strong>the</strong>rica<br />

populations in v.c. 60 and elsewhere in north-western England and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Wales. Whilst <strong>the</strong> text


16 Notes and Articles<br />

accompanying <strong>the</strong> map for E. a<strong>the</strong>rica in <strong>the</strong> New Atlas (Leach, 2002) recognises that <strong>the</strong>re might be<br />

identification problems towards <strong>the</strong> north <strong>of</strong> E. a<strong>the</strong>rica's range all <strong>the</strong> supposed records for<br />

E. a<strong>the</strong>rica were published with <strong>the</strong> exception <strong>of</strong> those for v.c. 60. Here <strong>the</strong> records were omitted at<br />

<strong>the</strong> last minute in <strong>the</strong> light <strong>of</strong> growing evidence <strong>of</strong> a more complicated situation.<br />

Coastal Elytrigia in v.c. 60 and elsewhere<br />

In v.c. 60 supposed E. a<strong>the</strong>rica dominates parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> upper salt marshes in Morecambe Bay and in<br />

<strong>the</strong> estuaries <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Rivers Lune, Wyre and Ribble.<br />

Wheldon & Wilson (1907) recorded E. a<strong>the</strong>rica at five localities in Morecambe Bay and in <strong>the</strong><br />

Lune and Wyre estuaries with a fur<strong>the</strong>r record added on <strong>the</strong> Keer estuary (part <strong>of</strong> Morecambe Bay) in<br />

1912 (Wheldon & Wilson, 1925). At that time <strong>the</strong> identity <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> grass was causing problems as <strong>the</strong><br />

Keer estuary ga<strong>the</strong>ring was identified as 'Agropyron pungens R. & S. var. aristatum Hack.' and<br />

material from Preesall on <strong>the</strong> Wyre estuary circulated in 1899 (Wheldon, 1901) prompted debate.<br />

Fortunately <strong>the</strong>se and o<strong>the</strong>r voucher specimens survived for Dr Cope to check. All are E. xoliveri<br />

(E. repens x E. a<strong>the</strong>rica) with <strong>the</strong> exception <strong>of</strong> one ga<strong>the</strong>ring in 1911 from Fleetwood on <strong>the</strong> Wyre<br />

estuary that is E. a<strong>the</strong>rica.<br />

More recently Gray & Scott (1987) refer to <strong>the</strong> variability <strong>of</strong> E. a<strong>the</strong>rica in Morecambe Bay and<br />

suggested a hybrid complex with E. juncea (Sand Couch) may be involved.<br />

Elsewhere in north-western England HaIliday (1997) doubts <strong>the</strong> validity <strong>of</strong> old records <strong>of</strong><br />

E. a<strong>the</strong>rica in Cumbria whilst in South Lancaster (v.c. 59) Savidge, Heywood & Gordon (1963) report<br />

one record for E. a<strong>the</strong>rica from <strong>the</strong> south bank <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ribble estuary near Southport. However a<br />

voucher for this has not been found. On <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r hand a plant collected by W.G. Travis in 1911 on<br />

<strong>the</strong> north bank <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mersey estuary at Hale (NMW) was confirmed as E. xoliveri although apart<br />

from Travis, opinion at <strong>the</strong> time suggested it was E. repens (Travis, 1912). De Tabley (1899) and<br />

Newton (1971) reported E. a<strong>the</strong>rica as occurring on both <strong>the</strong> Mersey and Dee estuaries in v.c. 58.<br />

Specimens from <strong>the</strong> Dee shore at LIV suggest that both E. xoliveri (colI, J.H. Lewis, 1877) and<br />

E. a<strong>the</strong>rica from clay banks (coil. Robert Brown, c.1870s) were present. At that time <strong>the</strong> shore was<br />

sandy and <strong>the</strong> only salt marshes were 6 or 7kms upstream <strong>of</strong> where <strong>the</strong> specimens were collected.<br />

W. Harrison collected ano<strong>the</strong>r specimen <strong>of</strong> E. xoliveri in 1914 on <strong>the</strong> north Wirral shore at Meols<br />

again when only sandy shores were present. In nor<strong>the</strong>rn Wales Wyune (1993) reported four records <strong>of</strong><br />

E. a<strong>the</strong>rica, one dating from 1850, for <strong>the</strong> Flint (v.c. 51) shore <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dee estuary. Goronwy Wynne<br />

has a voucher specimen for one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se records but this is E. xoliveri.<br />

With this background <strong>of</strong> confusion it was decided to collect voucher material from all <strong>the</strong> major<br />

salt marshes in v.c. 60 and from fur<strong>the</strong>r afield where possible. In v.c. 60 no E. a<strong>the</strong>rica was found.<br />

However in addition to E. xoliveri, confirmed as occurring commonly and extensively,<br />

E. xobtusiuscula (E. a<strong>the</strong>rica x E. juncea), E. x/axa (E. repens x E. juncea) and E. repens (Common<br />

Couch) were also found, sometimes abundantly.<br />

In v.c. 60, E. xoliveri <strong>of</strong>ten forms a characteristic monoculture, or occasionally with a few plants <strong>of</strong><br />

Aster tripolium (Sea Aster) and Suaeda maritima (Annual Sea-bIite), on <strong>the</strong> highest parts <strong>of</strong> ungrazed<br />

or lightly grazed salt marshes on muddy substrates. There it <strong>of</strong>ten occurs in a zone I - 3m or more<br />

wide and up to lkm or more in length above <strong>the</strong> mid-marsh communities and where inundation occurs<br />

by most spring tides. This community is probably ascribed to <strong>the</strong> 'Elymus pycnanthus' salt marsh<br />

community (SM 24) <strong>of</strong> Rodwell (2000) who indicates that it occurs on generally well-drained<br />

substrates in salt marshes from <strong>the</strong> Ribble estuary to Morecambe Bay. However it is more<br />

characteristic <strong>of</strong> salt marshes in south-eastern England. This would be in accordance with E. a<strong>the</strong>rica<br />

belonging to <strong>the</strong> coastal European Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Temperate tloristic element (Preston & Hill, 1997), which<br />

might be expected to reach its nor<strong>the</strong>rn limits in north-western England.<br />

Closely related to SM 24 is <strong>the</strong>' Elymus repens' salt marsh community (SM 28). This occupies a<br />

similar zone and Rodwell (2000) suggests it is less consistently confined to well drained sites and<br />

occasionally occurs on waterlogged clays. It is however characteristic <strong>of</strong> salt marshes in western<br />

England and Wales and in south-western Scotland. This community occurs in north-western England<br />

from <strong>the</strong> Dee to Morecambe Bay where it occupies a variety <strong>of</strong> substrates ranging from mud to<br />

stabilised shingle.


Notes and Articles 17<br />

On <strong>the</strong> north bank <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dee estuary <strong>the</strong> upper salt marsh is <strong>of</strong>ten dominated by a mosaic <strong>of</strong><br />

communities in which <strong>the</strong> background is formed by E. repens and within which <strong>the</strong>re are islands <strong>of</strong><br />

hybrid Elytrigia. These are both E. xoliveri and E. xobtusiuscula. In v.c. 60 E. xobtusiuscula was<br />

usually found in different parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> marsh to E. x oliveri. Towards <strong>the</strong> mouth <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dee estuary <strong>the</strong><br />

shore becomes progressively sandier and less muddy with fore dunes dominated by E. juncea forming<br />

<strong>the</strong> 'Elymusfarctus ssp. boreali-at/anticus' fore dune community, SD 4 (Rodwell, 2000). E. juncea is<br />

common along <strong>the</strong> sandy and shingle shore <strong>of</strong> north-western England and it seemed likely that it might<br />

form hybrids with E. repens. This proved to be correct and a few plants were found scattered in<br />

v.c. 60 ranging from sandy salt marshes to mobile sand dunes. In v.c. 59 E. xlaxa was found more<br />

frequently with colonies on sandy ground at Seaforth, Liverpool at <strong>the</strong> mouth <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mersey estuary<br />

and on sandy salt marshes at Marshside, Southport at <strong>the</strong> mouth <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ribble estuary.<br />

Never<strong>the</strong>less E. a<strong>the</strong>rica still grows in north-western England. Using <strong>the</strong> label data for specimens<br />

<strong>of</strong> E. a<strong>the</strong>rica from Wirral it was possible to identifY <strong>the</strong> precise location <strong>of</strong> 19 th century records. At<br />

that time <strong>the</strong>re was no salt marsh in <strong>the</strong> vicinity and <strong>the</strong> colonies were found on wet clay banks or<br />

sandy ground by <strong>the</strong> shore. Today E. a<strong>the</strong>rica grows in <strong>the</strong> same area and so far three extant colonies<br />

have been identified; one on wet clay, ano<strong>the</strong>r on sandy ground and a third by a sea wall at <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> a<br />

salt marsh. Salt marsh now covers extensive areas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dee estuary in front <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> E. a<strong>the</strong>rica<br />

colonies. However whilst <strong>the</strong> plants are male fertile no seed is produced.<br />

As Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica is a member <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> European Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Temperate element <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> flora<br />

<strong>the</strong> possibility that summer maximum temperatures could limit seed viability was considered. Pigott<br />

& Huntley (1981) showed how important this was for Tilia cordata (Small-leaved Lime) also reaching<br />

its nor<strong>the</strong>rn limits in north-western England. They demonstrated that for good seed set three or more<br />

consecutive days when <strong>the</strong> temperature reached 20°C were required at specific periods following<br />

pollination and that this approximated to <strong>the</strong> 20°C iso<strong>the</strong>rm for mean daily maximum temperatures for<br />

August. They published a map based on <strong>the</strong> Climatological Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> published in<br />

1952 that showed that <strong>the</strong> average means <strong>of</strong> daily maximum air temperature along <strong>the</strong> coast <strong>of</strong><br />

north-western England for <strong>the</strong> period 1901 - 1930 was between 18°C and 19°C. This might indicate<br />

that maximum summer temperature were not high enough on Wirral for Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica to set seed.<br />

However since <strong>the</strong>n <strong>the</strong> Central England Temperature series shows that whilst summers have become<br />

warmer by 0.2°C (mean summer temperature) during <strong>the</strong> 20 tl • century <strong>the</strong>re has also been a significant<br />

increase in <strong>the</strong> incidence <strong>of</strong> 'hot' days (maximum temperature over 20°C, especially during <strong>the</strong> 1990s<br />

(Hulme & Jenkins, 1998). Since 1966 <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Liverpool has kept temperature records at<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir botanic garden at Ness, some 7kms upstream <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica sites. These show that <strong>the</strong><br />

mean maximum temperature for both July and August is above 20°C and that in <strong>the</strong> warm summer <strong>of</strong><br />

2003 <strong>the</strong>se were 21.4°e for July and 21.1 °e for August. Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore <strong>the</strong>re were few days in <strong>the</strong>se two<br />

months when maximum temperatures did not reach 20°e. Thus given <strong>the</strong> significant summer<br />

warming that has taken place in recent years <strong>the</strong>n if summer maximum temperature were a limiting<br />

factor Wirral populations <strong>of</strong> Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica might have been expected to set seed, at least in 2003.<br />

That no seed was set suggests o<strong>the</strong>r factors are involved.<br />

Discussion<br />

A number <strong>of</strong> issues are raised by <strong>the</strong>se observations. Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica was always a rare plant in<br />

north-western England with only a few <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> older records being confirmed whereas <strong>the</strong> previously<br />

unrecorded hybrid E. xoliveri was present since at least from <strong>the</strong> second half <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 19 th century.<br />

However whilst E. xoliveri dominates some salt marshes o<strong>the</strong>r taxa are involved. These include,<br />

besides a few colonies <strong>of</strong> E. a<strong>the</strong>rica, an abundance <strong>of</strong> Elytrigia repens, <strong>of</strong>ten in a glaucous form,<br />

E. juncea, E. xobtusiuscula and E. xlaxa. It may be that fur<strong>the</strong>r work will show that at least some <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> glaucous leaved E. repens is E. repens ssp. arenosa recorded for <strong>the</strong> Sefton Sand dunes at Formby<br />

(v.c. 59) (Leach, 2002).<br />

Presumably fertile Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica was present in north-western England at some time but at <strong>the</strong><br />

moment it is not known what governs fertility. Never<strong>the</strong>less <strong>the</strong> pollen <strong>of</strong> existing colonies looks good<br />

so presumably repeated hybridisation events may occur. However vigorous rhizomatous species do


Notes and Articles 19<br />

Acknowledgements:<br />

I am grateful to Dr G. Halliday for drawing my attention to <strong>the</strong> problem, to <strong>the</strong> curators <strong>of</strong> herbaria<br />

who let me examine <strong>the</strong>ir Elytrigia collections and to Keith Hatton <strong>of</strong> Liverpool University for providing<br />

meteorological data. Also to my wife, Barbara, for map preparation. I am especially grateful to<br />

Dr T.A Cope who identified old and freshly ga<strong>the</strong>red material as well as tutoring me in <strong>the</strong> diagnostic<br />

features <strong>of</strong> this group.<br />

References:<br />

ADAM, 2000. Morecambe Bay salt marshes: 25 years <strong>of</strong> change, in <strong>British</strong> Saltmarshes (eds B.R.<br />

Sherwood, D.G Gardiner and T. Harris), pp. 81 - 107. Forest Text for <strong>the</strong> Linnean <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

London. London.<br />

Cox, J. 2003. A sea couch hybrid Elytrigia x drucei inland along an old Dorset tramway. <strong>BSBI</strong> News<br />

94: 21-22.<br />

DE TABLEY, LORD, 1899. The Flora <strong>of</strong> Cheshire. Longmans, Green and Co. London.<br />

DOODY, J.P. 1999. Salt marshes and sand dunes - natural or not, in Ecology and Landscape Development<br />

A History <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Mersey Basin (ed. E.F. Greenwood), pp. 176-173. Liverpool University<br />

Press, National Museums & Galleries on Merseyside. Liverpool.<br />

GRAY, AJ. & SCOTT, R. 1987. Salt marshes in Morecambe Bay: an assessment <strong>of</strong> present ecological<br />

knowledge (eds N.A. Robinson & AW. Pringle), pp. 97-117. Centre for North-west Regional<br />

Studies in conjunction with Morecambe Bay Study Group. Lancaster.<br />

HALLIDAY, G. 1997. A flora <strong>of</strong> Cumbria. Centre for North West Regional Studies, University <strong>of</strong><br />

Lancaster. Lancaster.<br />

HULME, M. & JENKINS, G.J. 1998. Climate change scenarios for <strong>the</strong> UK: scientific report. UKCIP<br />

Technical Report No.!. Climatic Research Unit. Norwich<br />

LEAcH, S.J. 2002. Accounts <strong>of</strong> Elytrigia a<strong>the</strong>rica taxa in New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora (eds<br />

C.D. Preston, D.A. Pearman and T.D. Dines), p. 794. Oxford University Press. Oxford.<br />

MARSHALL, J.D. 1967. The autobiography <strong>of</strong> William Stout <strong>of</strong> Lancaster 1665-1752. Manchester<br />

University Press for <strong>the</strong> Chetham <strong>Society</strong>. Manchester.<br />

NEWTON, A. 1971. Flora <strong>of</strong> Cheshire. Cheshire Community Council. Chester.<br />

PIGOTT, C.D. & HUNTLEY, J.P. 1981. Factors controlling <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> Tilia cordata at <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn<br />

limits <strong>of</strong> its geographical range Ill. Nature and causes <strong>of</strong> seed sterility. New Phytologist 87:<br />

817-839.<br />

PRESTON, C.D. & HILL, M.O. 1997. The geographical relationships <strong>of</strong> <strong>British</strong> and Irish vascular plants.<br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Linnean <strong>Society</strong> 124: 1-20.<br />

RODWELL, J.S., ed. 2000. <strong>British</strong> Plant Communities vol. 5, maritime communities and vegetation <strong>of</strong><br />

open habitats. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.<br />

SAVIDGE, lP., HEYWOOD, V.H. & GORDON, V., eds 1963. Travis's Flora <strong>of</strong> South Lancashire. Liverpool<br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> <strong>Society</strong>. Liverpool.<br />

TRAVIS, W.G. 1912. Report for 1911. <strong>Botanical</strong> <strong>Society</strong> and Exchange Club 3: 144.<br />

WHELDON, J.A 1901. Report for 1899. <strong>Botanical</strong> <strong>Society</strong> and Exchange Club 1899: 615-616.<br />

WHELDON, J.A & WILSON, A. 1907. The Flora <strong>of</strong> West Lancashire. Henry Young & Sons. Liverpool.<br />

WHELDON, J.A & WILSON, A. 1925. West Lancashire Flora: Notes, Additions and Extinctions. Lancashire<br />

and Cheshire Naturalist 17: 117-125.<br />

WYNNE, G. 1993. Flora <strong>of</strong>Flintshire. Gee & Son. Denbigh.<br />

ERIc F. GREENWOOD, 10 Gay ton Parkway, Gay ton, Wirral, Merseyside L60 3SS<br />

PLANTS AT THE EDGE - THE SOUTHERN LIMIT OF ERIGERON<br />

BOREALlS<br />

On 12lh August 2003, with not a grouse in sight, Theo Loizou, Leslie Tucker and I climbed Meall na<br />

Samhna, west <strong>of</strong> Killin on Loch Tay. Theo was surveying squares north <strong>of</strong> Glen Dochart on behalf <strong>of</strong><br />

Scottish Natural Heritage. After an interesting day on this rarely-visited ground just south <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> main


20 Notes and Articles<br />

Breadalbane ridge between Glens Dochart and Lochay, Theo struck south-west for his final quest, a<br />

historic record <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> montane eyebright (Euphrasiafrigida) near <strong>the</strong> summit <strong>of</strong> Meall Eoghainn in <strong>the</strong><br />

lkm square NN4733. Arriving on a grassy ledge near a rocky outcrop at 880m OD, we soon spotted<br />

<strong>the</strong> Euphrasia. While Theo made notes I walked a few metres towards <strong>the</strong> rocks and came face-t<strong>of</strong>ace<br />

with a fine plant <strong>of</strong> Alpine Fleabane (Erigeron borealis) (see colour section, plate 1), with ano<strong>the</strong>r<br />

fur<strong>the</strong>r up <strong>the</strong> rockface. Despite Theo's excitement at this find (see below) it was only later that it<br />

dawned on me that <strong>the</strong> plant in <strong>the</strong> photo may be <strong>the</strong> most sou<strong>the</strong>rly E. borealis in <strong>the</strong> world.<br />

There is no lack <strong>of</strong> plants that reach <strong>the</strong>ir nor<strong>the</strong>rn limit in <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>, including many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

hundred or so species belonging to <strong>the</strong> (sub)Mediterranean-(sub)Atlantic 'floristic elements' defined<br />

by Preston & Hill (1997). Presumably our equable climate, tempered by <strong>the</strong> Gulf Stream, is <strong>the</strong> main<br />

reason. By contrast. <strong>the</strong> number <strong>of</strong> non-endemic species whose sou<strong>the</strong>rn limit lies in Britain can be<br />

counted (almost) on <strong>the</strong> fingers <strong>of</strong> one hand. Their occurrence here when <strong>the</strong>ir main populations lie far<br />

to <strong>the</strong> north is still not understood to everyone's satisfaction, so individual examples <strong>of</strong> extreme plants<br />

may be <strong>of</strong> some interest. and not totally trivial.<br />

Such species are found among those included by Preston & Hill in <strong>the</strong> most nor<strong>the</strong>rly <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>ir four<br />

biomes, <strong>the</strong> Arctic-montane, and specifically among those eighteen species which do not grow on<br />

Eurasian mountains south <strong>of</strong> Britain. Eleven <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se species occur in <strong>the</strong> contiguous United States<br />

(USDA 2002), and several in Canada as far south as Newfoundland (Meades, Gay & Brouillet 2000),<br />

while ano<strong>the</strong>r, Woolly Willow (Salix lanata ssp. lanata), grows, according to Anderberg (2003), in <strong>the</strong><br />

sou<strong>the</strong>rn Irkutsk region <strong>of</strong> Siberia. This leaves six Arctic-montane species having <strong>the</strong>ir global<br />

sou<strong>the</strong>rn limit in Britain: Arctic Mouse-ear (Cerastium arcticum) (found also in Greenland and<br />

Labrador), Mountain Willow (Salix arbuscula) and Whortle-leaved Willow (s. myrsinites), Arctic<br />

Sandwort (Arenaria norvegica), Norwegian Mugwort (Artemisia norvegica). and Erigeron borealis<br />

(whose English name is a misnomer - unlike a related plant, E. neglectus, it is not found in <strong>the</strong> Alps).<br />

To <strong>the</strong>se should be added a few plants from Preston & Hill's Boreal-montane biome, including some<br />

in critical genera such as Euphrasia raising difficult questions <strong>of</strong> taxonomy. I am inclined to accept<br />

only three - Long-stalked Orache (Atriplex longipes) and Rock Whitebeam (Sorbus rupicola)<br />

certainly, and Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Knotgrass (Polygonum boreale) probably - as distinct species, non-endemic<br />

to <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> and with <strong>the</strong>ir sou<strong>the</strong>rn limit here. (The Lady's-mantle (Alchemilla wichurae), with<br />

a single outlier in <strong>the</strong> Sudeten Mountains, just fails this test).<br />

These three, and <strong>the</strong> first three <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> six Arctic-montane species, are relatively widely distributed,<br />

with post-1987 New Atlas records from 27,59,70,28,26 and 38 hectads (lO-km squares) respectively<br />

(Preston, Pearman & Dines 2002). It would be fruitless, except in (possibly) <strong>the</strong> Mouse-ear's<br />

Snowdonia stations, and (probably) those <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Whitebeam in Devon, to attempt to identify <strong>the</strong> most<br />

sou<strong>the</strong>rly colony, let alone pinpoint a particular plant. The remaining three species are much rarer.<br />

Arenaria norvegica occurs as two subspecies whose populations fluctuate but in most years number<br />

several thousand, both ssp. anglica and ssp. norvegica behaving as armuals or biennials (Wigginton<br />

1999). For this reason, and putting aside <strong>the</strong> question <strong>of</strong> whe<strong>the</strong>r, following for example Anderberg<br />

(2003) both taxa should be treated as subspecies <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> widespread Fringed Sandwort (Arenaria<br />

ciliata), <strong>the</strong> concept <strong>of</strong> 'most sou<strong>the</strong>rly plant' is a moving target. This leaves two perennials <strong>of</strong> which<br />

Artemisia norvegica (<strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> plant is var. scotica, var. saxatilis being widespread in <strong>the</strong> United<br />

States (USDA 2002» is known from just three Ross-shire mountains. At each site <strong>the</strong>re are hundreds,<br />

and in one case many thousands, <strong>of</strong> plants, including one colony extending over 9 hectares (Wigginton<br />

1999). E. borealis, by contrast, is not subdivided and has a small <strong>British</strong> population that can be<br />

monitored down to individual plants.<br />

The New Atlas records six post-1987 hectads for Alpine Fleabane, in Breadalbane (M. Perth) and<br />

<strong>the</strong> Eastern Highlands (Angus and S. Aberdeen). Breadalbane, <strong>the</strong> more sou<strong>the</strong>rly <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> two districts,<br />

supports a population <strong>of</strong> about 600, <strong>the</strong> Eastern Highlands fewer than 300 (Wigginton 1999). There<br />

are post-l 987 Breadalbane records from NN64 (which includes Ben Lawers) and NN65, a pre-1970<br />

record from Meall nan Tarmachan in NN54, and a fur<strong>the</strong>r post-1987 record in NN43. Richard Thomas<br />

tells me that E. borealis was found here in 1999, probably by Clive Dixon, on an eastern outlier <strong>of</strong> Ben<br />

Heasgarnich. Meall Eoghainn is about 5km fur<strong>the</strong>r south, in a square for which SNH has no record,


Notes and Articles 21<br />

old or new (this accounts for Theo's excitement). It seems that this site for E. borealis at latitude N56°<br />

27' 37", and <strong>the</strong> particular plant in <strong>the</strong> photo, is indeed <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rnmost in <strong>the</strong> world.<br />

References:<br />

ANDERBERG, A. 2003. Den virtuella jloran (http://linnaeus.nrm.selflora). Naturhistoriska Rijksmuseet,<br />

Sweden.<br />

MEA DES, S.J., GAY, S.H. & BROUILLET L. 2000. Annotated checklist <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> vascular plants <strong>of</strong><br />

Newfoundland and Labrador (http://nfrnuseum.com/meades.htm). The Provincial Museum <strong>of</strong><br />

Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.<br />

PRESTON C.D. & HILL M.O. 1997. The geographical relationships <strong>of</strong> <strong>British</strong> and Irish vascular plants.<br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Linnean <strong>Society</strong> 124: 1-120.<br />

PRESTON C.D., PEARMAN D.A. & DINES T.D. 2002. New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora. Oxford<br />

University Press, Oxford, UK.<br />

USDA, NRCS. 2002. The PLANTS database, Version 3.5 (http://plants.usda.gov). National Plant Data<br />

Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana USA.<br />

WIGGINTON, M.l. (ed.). 1999. <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books 1 Vascular plants. 3,d edn. Joint Nature Conservation<br />

Committee, Peterborough, UK.<br />

JOHN A. EDGINGTON, 19 Mecklenburgh Square, London WCIN 2AD<br />

WHAT LIES ACROSS THE CHANNEL?<br />

Since recently moving to Brussels, I have been mentally comparing <strong>the</strong> floras <strong>of</strong> Belgium and Britain.<br />

As <strong>the</strong> two countries are so close geographically and climatically, you may be interested in my observations.<br />

Brussels has an average annual temperature <strong>of</strong> 10°C and an annual rainfall <strong>of</strong> about 80cm.<br />

This is similar to sou<strong>the</strong>rn Britain, for example <strong>the</strong> average yearly temperature at Kew is 10AoC,<br />

though it is dryer in sou<strong>the</strong>rn England at around 60cm per year. Summer maximum temperatures are<br />

also similar, though winter averages are about a degree colder in Belgium. As it is late in <strong>the</strong> season I<br />

have only had an opportunity to look at <strong>the</strong> urban flora, but this has some interesting differences, when<br />

compared to <strong>the</strong> UK.<br />

The most obvious difference was <strong>the</strong> complete lack <strong>of</strong> Senecio squalidus, instead, in all <strong>the</strong> same<br />

habitats, is found S. inaequidens. As far as I have found <strong>the</strong>re is no record <strong>of</strong> S. squalidus in Belgium.<br />

S. inaequidens has been recorded in Britain and has occasionally naturalised. Its fur<strong>the</strong>r spread across<br />

Britain has long been prophesied, but for some reason it has not yet increased.<br />

There are many o<strong>the</strong>r introduced weeds that may be familiar to <strong>British</strong> Botanists, though <strong>the</strong>y<br />

appear more common here. For example, Portulaca oleracea, Amaranthus retrojlexus, Setaria viridis,<br />

Echinochloa crus-galli and Bidens frondosa. These species are all well naturalised here and some are<br />

serious weeds in gardens and farms. Many <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se plants are weeds on a global scale and as our<br />

climate warms one would expect to see <strong>the</strong>m increase in Britain.<br />

A species I had not seen before was Duchesnea indica (Yellow-flowered Strawberry), which has<br />

escaped from gardens all over Brussels. I first took it for Fragaria vesca until I saw its yellow flowers<br />

and larger fruits.<br />

So far I have seen little difference in <strong>the</strong> native Belgian flora to that <strong>of</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn Britain. However,<br />

Cirsium oleraceum, is common in woods and waysides, whereas it is an uncommon introduction to<br />

Britain. Also, Epipactis helleborine is a weed <strong>of</strong> gardens and parks, much like is in <strong>the</strong> north-eastern<br />

USA and only a few parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> UK.<br />

During 2004 I hope to visit more <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> native habitats <strong>of</strong> Belgium. There are many places <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> interest here. The Ardennes has a good limestone flora and extensive forests. In <strong>the</strong><br />

north-west <strong>the</strong>re are large moorlands and bogs, while along <strong>the</strong> coast <strong>the</strong>re are salt marshes and dunes.<br />

Hopefully, I shall report my findings at a later date.<br />

QUENTIN GROOM, Rue Jean Baptiste de Keyser l57A, 1970 Wezembeek-Oppem, BELGIUM; email:<br />

qgroom@reticule.co.uk


22 Notes and Articles<br />

A KEY TO BROMEAE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN CLIMATIC ZONES OF<br />

SOUTHERN EUROPE, SOUTH WEST ASIA, AND NORTH AFRICA<br />

The key is designed to assist <strong>the</strong> identification <strong>of</strong> Bromeae in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean climatic zones below<br />

1000 metres <strong>of</strong> altitude <strong>of</strong> Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, <strong>the</strong> Balkan countries including Greece,<br />

Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco and <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean<br />

islands. In <strong>the</strong>se zones most Bromeae growth occurs following rainfall during <strong>the</strong> mild October to<br />

April winter and ceases in <strong>the</strong> hot summer droughts. The key is written primarily for <strong>British</strong> botanists<br />

visiting <strong>the</strong>se countries and <strong>the</strong> nomenclature is as in Stace (1997), Tzvelev (1976), Holub (1973) and<br />

Tutin (1962).<br />

The key has been developed and tested by:<br />

1. a detailed study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> existing Floras and much o<strong>the</strong>r published data,<br />

2. examining over 2000 (mostly herbarium) specimens <strong>of</strong> Bromeae species that were collected in <strong>the</strong><br />

countries listed above,<br />

3. cultivating all <strong>the</strong> grasses in <strong>the</strong> key (except Bromus pumilio, B. chrysopogon and Bromopsis<br />

cappadocica) and studying <strong>the</strong>ir growth.<br />

KEY TO GENERA<br />

1. Lower glume with 3-5(7) veins; upper glume with 5-7 (9) veins<br />

1. Lower glume with 1 (3) veins; upper glume with 3(5) veins<br />

2. Annuals without sterile shoots at flowering; spikelets ovate to linear-lanceolate, not flattened<br />

Bromus<br />

2. Annual or biennial; spikelets broadly-lanceolate, strongly flattened because <strong>the</strong> lemmas<br />

fold longitudinally along <strong>the</strong> thickened central vein (keel); awns 0-3( -4)mm long<br />

Ceratochloa cathartica<br />

3. Perennials with sterile shoots at flowering; spikelets narrowly oblong, tapering near <strong>the</strong> apex;<br />

awns not longer than <strong>the</strong> lemmas or absent Bromopsis<br />

3. Annuals without sterile shoots at flowering; spikelets lanceolate becoming wider at <strong>the</strong> apex<br />

as <strong>the</strong>y begin to open and thus <strong>the</strong>n wedge-shaped; lemmas narrow with long awns Anisantha<br />

BROMUS<br />

1. Some upper lemmas with 3 or more awns; awns <strong>of</strong>ten reddish or purple and eventually<br />

curving out or spreading 2<br />

1. Lemmas with fewer than 3 awns 3<br />

2. Upper lemmas with 3(-5) awns, lateral awns <strong>of</strong>ten shorter and thinner B. danthoniae<br />

2. Most lemmas with 5-9 awns B. pumilio (Section Boissiera)<br />

3. Awns arising from <strong>the</strong> bottom <strong>of</strong> a deeply cleft lemma apex; lemmas 8-9mm long<br />

3. Awns arising on <strong>the</strong> back <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lemmas<br />

4. Panicle 1O-20cm wide with very long branches; an<strong>the</strong>rs >3mm long<br />

4. Panicle


Notes and Articles 23<br />

8. Panicle narrowly-oblong; spikelets 25-45 mm long; lemmas 11-18mm long;<br />

awns arising >4mm below <strong>the</strong> apex <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lemmas B. alopecuros<br />

8. Panicle broadly-oblong to ovate; spikelets 8-25mm long; lemmas 7-11.5mm long;<br />

awns arising 1.5-4mm below <strong>the</strong> apex <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lemmas 9<br />

9. Spikelets 20-25mm long; lemmas 9-11.5mm long; awns arising 3-4mm below<br />

<strong>the</strong> apex <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> lemmas B. chrysopogon<br />

9. Spikelets 8-20mm long; lemmas 7-8mm long; awns arising 1.5-2.5mm below<br />

<strong>the</strong> apex <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lemmas B. scoparius<br />

10. Panicle with slender flexuous pedicels/branches; awns arising 2-3.5mm below<br />

<strong>the</strong> apex <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lemmas; awns always strongly curved out, at least at fruiting,<br />

and <strong>of</strong>ten some twisted B. intermedius<br />

10. Pedicelslbranches not slender and flexuous; awns arising


24 Notes and Articles<br />

3. Plant in patches with long creeping rhizomes; panicle ± erect; awns 0-2.5mm long B. inermis<br />

3. Plant loosely tufted without long creeping rhizomes; panicle lax; with long branches;<br />

awns >3mm long 4<br />

4. Upper leaf-sheath usually with long s<strong>of</strong>t hairs; panicle very lax and spreading, with long<br />

patent branches; several thick cilia usually present on <strong>the</strong> edge <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> culm at <strong>the</strong> lowest<br />

panicle-node B. ramosa<br />

4. Upper leaf-sheath usually with minute patent hairs (30 x); panicle erect, lax, and narrow<br />

with shorter branches, <strong>of</strong>ten swept to one side; thick cilia usually absent or only a few on<br />

<strong>the</strong> edge <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> culm at <strong>the</strong> lowest panicle-node B. benekenii<br />

ANISANTHA<br />

1. Panicle stiffly erect and compact; all pedicels shorter than <strong>the</strong>ir spikelets 2<br />

I. Panicle erect, lax or compact; at least some pedicels/branches longer than <strong>the</strong>ir spikelets 4<br />

2. At least one pedicel> 1 Omm long<br />

2. Panicle dense with no pedicels > 1 Omm long<br />

A. madritensis<br />

3<br />

3. Panicle obovate, very dense and congested with many spikelets; lemmas lanceolate,<br />

2-4mm wide; awns straight A. rubens<br />

3. Panicle narrowly fan-shaped, less dense with fewer spikelets; lemmas linear 1.5-2mm wide;<br />

awns curving out and <strong>of</strong>ten twisted at fruiting A. fasciculata<br />

4. Panicle erect, lax or dense; culm at lowest panicle-node scabrid or with minute hairs (30x)<br />

upper glurne 20-42mm long; callus scar at <strong>the</strong> base <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lemma oval/elliptic; awns<br />

>35mm long<br />

4. Panicle lax, and spreading; upper glume 7-1 8 (-20)mm long; awns 2 small spikelets or one-sided<br />

with several spikelets from <strong>the</strong> rachis; culm at lowest panicle-node minutely pubescent (30 x);<br />

upper glume 7-12mm long A. tectorum<br />

NOTES<br />

Dissection and especially <strong>the</strong> assessment <strong>of</strong> lemma texture is facilitated if spikelets are first soaked<br />

for an hour or more in water with a few drops <strong>of</strong> detergent.<br />

Lemma texture is determined by gently prodding pre-soaked lemmas with a blunt needle as<br />

described in Spalton(2001). Protruding veins should not be used as <strong>the</strong> sole determinant <strong>of</strong>Iemma<br />

texture because sometimes lea<strong>the</strong>ry lemmas can be quite thin and thus veins can be protruding (this<br />

is frequent in B. japonicus) and, in o<strong>the</strong>rs, pubescence can mask protruding veins. If a caryopsis is<br />

present, it should be removed before doing this test.<br />

Measurements that are not consistent should be averaged and more than one specimen should be<br />

examined.<br />

Where <strong>the</strong>re is an overlap in <strong>the</strong> measurements used to distinguish taxa, <strong>the</strong> character should only<br />

be used if<strong>the</strong> measured lengths are outside <strong>the</strong> overlapping lengths.<br />

'Panicle-branches' are measured from <strong>the</strong> node on <strong>the</strong> rachis to <strong>the</strong> base <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> terminal spikelet.<br />

'Pedicels/branches' means pedicels or branches or both combined.<br />

Spikelet lengths and widths are measured before fruit has formed.<br />

Spikelet and lemma measurements exclude <strong>the</strong> awns.<br />

The lemma measured is <strong>the</strong> lowest lemma or <strong>the</strong> second lowest, whichever is longer.<br />

An<strong>the</strong>r measurements refer to mature undehisced an<strong>the</strong>rs from <strong>the</strong> lowest florets; o<strong>the</strong>r an<strong>the</strong>rs are<br />

smaller.


Notes and Articles 25<br />

Determinations should be checked against <strong>the</strong> more detailed descriptions in <strong>the</strong> publications listed<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Bibliography.<br />

Immature plants can be confusing. Immaturity is indicated in Bromeae when <strong>the</strong> glumes appear to<br />

be unusually long in relation to <strong>the</strong> length <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> spikeIet. On investigation it will be found that <strong>the</strong><br />

glumes, which always mature early to protect <strong>the</strong> immature spikelet, are <strong>of</strong> normal length and it is<br />

<strong>the</strong> rest <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> spikelet which is short because it is still immature. Microscopic examination will<br />

reveal fragile translucent an<strong>the</strong>rs and immature pollen.<br />

The key does not include some very rare species but <strong>the</strong> author would be pleased to examine and<br />

determine specimens (whole plants, please).<br />

Two new combinations are now published:<br />

Anisantha fasciculata (C.Pres1), Spalton comb. novo Basionym: Bromus fasciculatus C.Presl, Cyp.<br />

Gram. Sic. 39 (1820).<br />

Anisantha diandra var. rigida (Roth), Spalton comb. novo Basionym: Bromus rigidus Roth in Bot.<br />

Mag. (Roemer & Usteri) 4(10): 21 (1790).<br />

I thank Robert Portal and Clive Stace for valuable comments on an earlier draft <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> key, <strong>the</strong><br />

Curators <strong>of</strong> E, K, LTR, NMW, and RNG for <strong>the</strong> loan <strong>of</strong> specimens and all those botanists from<br />

Britain and abroad who have sent me specimens. I hope that <strong>the</strong>y will continue to do so.<br />

Bibliography:<br />

ACEDo, C. & LLAMAS, F. 1999. The Genus Bromus L. (Poaceae) in <strong>the</strong> Iberian Peninsula. J.Cramer,<br />

Berlin.<br />

AINOUCHE, M.L. et al. 1999. The allotetraploid invasive Bromus hordeaceus L. (Poaceae): genetic<br />

diversity, origin and molecular evolution. Folio. Geobot. 34: 405-419.<br />

BAclc,T. & JOGAN, N. 2001. Multivariate morphometric study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Bromus erectus group (Poaceae,<br />

Bromeae) in Slovenia. Phyton. (Austria) 4112: 295-311.<br />

BOR, N.L. 1968 in C.C. Townsend et al. eds. Flora <strong>of</strong> Iraq. Ministry <strong>of</strong> Agriculture, Iraq.<br />

BOR, N.L. 1970 in K.H. Rechinger ed. Flora Iranica. Academische Druck, Graz.<br />

BOR, N.L. 1985 in R.D. Meikle ed. Flora <strong>of</strong> Cyprus. 2. RBG, Kew.<br />

CHRTEK, J. & SLAVIK, B. 1994. Contribution to <strong>the</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> Cyprus - B. chrysopogon. Flora Mediterranea<br />

4: 18.<br />

COPE, T.A. & HOSNI, H.A. 1991. A key to Egyptian grasses. RBG, Kew.<br />

ESNAuLT, M.A. 1984. Etudes sur la variabilite morphologique de Bromus madritensis. Phytomorph.<br />

34: 91-99.<br />

FEINBRUN-DoTHAN, N. 1986. Flora Palaestina 4. Jerusalem.<br />

HOLMSTROM, G. & SCHOLZ, H. 2000. Bromus bidentatus spec. nova and B. lepidus, two odd bromegrasses<br />

(Gramineae). Bot. Jahbr. Syst. 122: 195-200.<br />

HOlOB,1. 1973. New Names in Phanerogamae 2. Folio. Geobot. Phytotax. 8: 159-179.<br />

KALHEBER, H. & SCHOLZ, H. (2001) in R. Hand ed. Bromus chrysopogon in Supplementary Note to <strong>the</strong><br />

Flora <strong>of</strong> Cyprus. Willdenowia 31: 406.<br />

KOZUHROV, S. et al. 1981. Evolutionary patterns in some brome-grass species (Bromus) <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Balkan<br />

Peninsula. Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 102: 381-391.<br />

MAIRE, R. 1955. Flore de I 'Afrique du Nord 3. Paul Chevalier, Paris.<br />

OJA, T. 1998. Isoenzyme diversity and phylogenetic relationships in <strong>the</strong> section Bromus <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> grass<br />

genus Bromus. Bio. Syst. Ecol. 26: 403 -413.<br />

OJA, T. 1999. Allozyme diversity and interspecific differentiation in two diploid brome-grass species,<br />

Bromus tectorum and Bromus sterilis. Plant. Bioi. 1: 679-686.<br />

OJA, T. & JAASKA, V. 1996. Isoenzyme data on <strong>the</strong> genetic divergence and allopolyploidy in <strong>the</strong> section<br />

Genea <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> grass genus Bromus (Poaceae). Hereditas 125: 249-255.<br />

OJA, T. & JAASKA, V. 1998. Allozyme diversity and phylogenetic relationships among diploid annual<br />

bromes (Bromus). Ann. Bot. Fenn. 35: 123-130.


26 Notes and Articles<br />

OlA, T. & LAARMANN, H. 2002. Comparative study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> ploidy series Bromus sterilis, B. diandrus,<br />

and B. rigidus (Poaceae) based on chromosome numbers, morphology and isozymes. Plant. BioI.<br />

4: 484-491<br />

OlA, T. 2002. Genetic divergence and interspecific differentiation in <strong>the</strong> Bromus madritensis complex<br />

(Poaceae) based on isozyme data. Bio. Syst. Ecol. 30: 433-449.<br />

OlA,T. 2002. Bromus fasciculatus Presl- a third diploid progenitor <strong>of</strong> Bromus section Genea allopolyploids<br />

(Poaceae). Hereditas 137: 113-118.<br />

PORTAL, R. 1995. Bromus de France. 16 Rue Louis Brioude, 43750, Vals-pres-le Puy, France.<br />

RIVAS PONCE, M.A. 1988. Nuevos datos para la diagnosis de Bromus rubens L. y B. madritensis<br />

(Poaceae). Lagascalia 15: 89-93.<br />

SALES, F. 1993. Taxonomy and nomenclature <strong>of</strong> Bromus sect. Genea. Edinb. J. Bot 50(1): 1-31.<br />

SALES, F. 1994. A reassessment <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Bromus madritensis complex: a multivariate approach. Israel J.<br />

Plant Sciences. 42: 245-255.<br />

SCHOLZ, H. 1972. Bromus brachystachys Homung und B. pseudobrachystachys H.Scholz spec. novo<br />

Bot. Jb. 91: 462-469.<br />

SCHOLZ, H. 1974. Bromus chrysopogon Viviani - einer wieder als art bewertete Gramineae aus dem<br />

Mittelmeergebeit. Willdenowia 7: 409-413.<br />

SCHOLZ, H. 1978. Synaptospermie und heterodiasporie in der gattung Bromus. Willdenowia 8:<br />

341-350.<br />

SCHOLZ, H. 1981. Der Bromus-pectinatus-Komplex (Gramineae) im Nahem und Mittleren Osten. Bot.<br />

Jahrb. Syst. 102: 471-495.<br />

SCHOLZ, H. 1981. Bemerkungen iiber Bromus madritensis und B. rubens (Gramineae). Willdenowia 11:<br />

249-258.<br />

SCHOLZ, H. 1987. Delimitation and classification <strong>of</strong> Bromus fasciculatus (Poaceae). PI. Syst., Evol.<br />

155: 277-282.<br />

SMITH, P.M. 1970. Taxonomy and nomenclature <strong>of</strong>brome-grasses. Notes RBG Edinb. 30: 361-375.<br />

SMITH, P.M. 1970. Serology and species relationships in annual bromes. Ann. Bot. 36 1-30.<br />

SMITH, P.M. 1981. Ecotypes and subspecies in annual brome-grasses. Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 102: 497-509.<br />

SMITH, P.M. (1980) in T.G. Tutin et al., eds. Flora Europaea 5. Cambridge University Press.<br />

SMITH, P.M. (1985) in P.H. Davis et af. eds. Flora <strong>of</strong> Turkey and E. Aegean islands 9. Edinburgh<br />

University Press.<br />

SMITH, P.M. 1985. Observations on Turkish brome-grasses. Notes RBG. Edinb. 42: 491-501.<br />

SMITH, P.M. & SALES, F. 1993. Bromus L. taxonomy and relationship <strong>of</strong> some species with small<br />

spikelets. Edinb. J. Bot. 50: 149-171.<br />

SPALTON, L.M. 2001. A new subspecies <strong>of</strong> Bromus hordeaceus L. Watsonia 23: 525-531.<br />

SPALTON, L.M. 2002. An analysis <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> characters <strong>of</strong> Bromus racemosus L., B. commutatus and<br />

B. secalinus L. Watsonia 24: 193-202.<br />

SPALTON, L.M. 2003. Observations on Bromopsis benekenii (Lange) Holub in Britain. Watsonia 24:<br />

535-538.<br />

STACE, C.A 1997. New Flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>, 2 nd ed. Cambridge University Press.<br />

STEINBERG, C.H. 1981. Nomenklatorische Typen aus der Gattung Bromus in italienischen Herbarien.<br />

Bot. Jahrb. Syst. 102: 411-425.<br />

TUTIN, T.G. (1962) in AR. Clapham et al. eds. Flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. Cambridge University Press.<br />

TZVELEV, N.N. 1976. Grasses <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Soviet Union, translated A.A.Balkema (1983), Rotterdam.<br />

TZVELEV, N.N. 1987. The System <strong>of</strong> Grasses (Poaceae) and <strong>the</strong>ir Evolution. Komarov Readings 37.<br />

Leningrad, translated V.V. Michaelova, ed. A Cronquist. New York <strong>Botanical</strong> Garden.<br />

VINEY, D.E. 1996. Illustrated Flora <strong>of</strong> North Cyprus 2. ARG Gantner-Verlag K.G.Vaduz.<br />

WALTERS, S.M. 1989. European Garden Flora 2. Cambridge University Press.<br />

LAURlE M. SPALTON, 6 Marine Parade, Budleigh Salterton, Devon, EX9 6NS, U.K. Tel: (01395) 445813.<br />

Emai1: laurie@bromus.fsworld.co.uk


28 Notes and Articles<br />

SCROPHULARIA SCORODONIA (SCROPHULARIACEAE): NATIVE IN<br />

SOUTH HAMPSHIRE?<br />

I first recorded Scrophularia scorodonia (Balm-leaved Figwort) on Burrow Island, Portsmouth,<br />

SU620007, V.c. 11 (S. Hants.) on 29 th June 1996. The plants were growing just behind <strong>the</strong> shore with<br />

Urtica dioica (Common Nettle), on a low scrubby bank covered in Hedera helix (Common Ivy).<br />

Burrow Island is a small, wooded, uninhabited island, about 12Sm long and SOm wide, situated on <strong>the</strong><br />

west side <strong>of</strong> Portsmouth Harbour. It is accessible on foot only during <strong>the</strong> low tide period, using an<br />

exposed shingle spit. It is <strong>the</strong> site <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> historic Fort St James.<br />

I did not realise <strong>the</strong> significance <strong>of</strong> this find, being <strong>the</strong> first record in Hampshire, until quite some<br />

time later during a conversation with Eric Clement. Although he originally dismissed my<br />

identification, on <strong>the</strong> basis that <strong>the</strong> species had not previously been recorded in Hampshire, he later<br />

visited <strong>the</strong> location with me and duly confirmed <strong>the</strong> record.<br />

When first assessing whe<strong>the</strong>r <strong>the</strong> record was native or introduced Eric and I both came to <strong>the</strong><br />

conclusion that it had probably arrived naturally, and as S. scorodonia was considered native at that<br />

time we concluded that it marked an easterly outpost. After <strong>the</strong> Red Data Book (Wiggington 1999)<br />

was published, I concurred with Eric's suggestion that it could be an eastward extension <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> native<br />

range in Britain, i.e. '<strong>the</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> <strong>of</strong> Scilly, Cornwall, Devon and Dorset'. Although <strong>the</strong> New Atlas<br />

(Preston et al. 2002) treats it as a neophyte and also shows scattered records for South Wales and<br />

eastern England, I still believe it should be considered native in its core range, although reasoned<br />

assessment should be applied beyond that.<br />

Two issues need to be considered: (a) whe<strong>the</strong>r S. scorodonia is native in Britain, and (b) whe<strong>the</strong>r it<br />

is native on Burrow Island. I will attempt to explain <strong>the</strong> reasoning behind my conclusion that it is<br />

native in both cases.<br />

Possible reasons for its presence are deliberate human introduction, accidental human introduction<br />

or natural arrival, <strong>the</strong> relevant factors involved in each are considered, with my assessment <strong>of</strong><br />

likelihood for Britain and Burrow Island.<br />

There is a lack <strong>of</strong> records any distance inland, <strong>the</strong> plant lacks any outstanding visual appeal, and<br />

does not seem to have any less obvious applications, as a medicinal, crop, or ground-cover plant, for<br />

example, which would make it useful. It shows no preference for inhabited over uninhabited<br />

situations (Wiggington 1999). All <strong>the</strong>se facts lead me to <strong>the</strong> conclusion that deliberate human<br />

introduction to Britain was highly unlikely, and on Burrow Island, which is virtually unknown even to<br />

locals, even more unlikely.<br />

There seems to me to be a very small likelihood <strong>of</strong> seeds transferring from a boat, car or person<br />

to its typical 'ra<strong>the</strong>r scruffy coastal or near-coastal habitats' as described by Wiggington (1999). If<br />

human elements were a contributory factor I would expect it to be found at used railway lines and<br />

active quarries, ra<strong>the</strong>r than disused/abandoned sites as mentioned by Wiggington. and more <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

in <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> larger docks and resorts ra<strong>the</strong>r than (smaller?) ports and estuaries. It think it<br />

unlikely to be a result <strong>of</strong> accidental human introduction in Britain, and highly unlikely on Burrow<br />

Island.<br />

The fact that it favours port areas is probably incidental, and greater importance should be<br />

attached to <strong>the</strong> sheltered position for which port areas are selected, and <strong>the</strong> milder climate and less<br />

extreme wea<strong>the</strong>r conditions found in sheltered positions. These factors naturally increase <strong>the</strong><br />

likelihood <strong>of</strong> any plant with oceanic requirements finding a niche. There is also a possibility <strong>of</strong><br />

bird-assisted arrival, especially on coastal sites. A plant which has a known preference for coastal<br />

areas must surely have a fairly high possibility <strong>of</strong> arriving aided by no more than <strong>the</strong> tide and waves,<br />

or among flotsam. Natural arrival seems to be <strong>the</strong> most likely explanation for <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong><br />

S. scorodonia in Britain.<br />

All things considered I think that natural arrival in Britain seems most likely, and <strong>the</strong>refore feel it<br />

should be considered a native here. I am also <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> opinion that it has colonised Burrow Island by<br />

natural means and should also be considered native at this site. The distribution <strong>of</strong> Poa infirma (Early


Notes and Articles 29<br />

Meadow-grass), which is similar to that <strong>of</strong> S. scorodonia, and yet is considered native in its core range,<br />

only streng<strong>the</strong>ns my decision.<br />

Vaguely related, and not to be missed: On <strong>the</strong> day that Eric finally did confirm my find, he became<br />

intent on exploring <strong>the</strong> inner part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> island, ignoring my hints about time and tide . . . I went to<br />

where I could see <strong>the</strong> spit, and when I informed him that <strong>the</strong> spit was 'rapidly-disappearing' he finally<br />

took note, and we ended up racing along <strong>the</strong> spit in ankle-deep seawater.<br />

My thanks to Eric Clement and John Norton for comments and suggestions on this article.<br />

References:<br />

WIGGINGTON, M.J. ed. (1999). <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books, 1 vascular plants. 3 rd edn. JNCC, Peterborough.<br />

PRESTON, C.D., PEARMAN, DA, & DINES, T.D. (2002). New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora. Oxford<br />

University Press.<br />

DEBBlE R. ALLAN, 13 Mill Pond Road, Gosport, Hants. P012 4QL emai1: debbie.allan1@ntlworid.com<br />

GERANIUM PURPUREUM SUBSPECIES<br />

With regard to <strong>the</strong> article by Peter Yeo in <strong>BSBI</strong> News 93, I am one <strong>of</strong> those responsible for doubts<br />

about <strong>the</strong> distinctiveness <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> two subspecies.<br />

When I moved to Hampshire in 1978 <strong>the</strong> late Lady Anne Brewis introduced me to 'ssp.<br />

purpureum' growing upright on <strong>the</strong> S shore <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lagoon N <strong>of</strong> Hayling Golf Course, and to ssp.<br />

forsteri growing prostrate on <strong>the</strong> shingle S <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> course. I could not see any difference in <strong>the</strong><br />

sculpturing <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mericarp, only in <strong>the</strong> growth forms. The colonies by <strong>the</strong> lagoon died out due to<br />

scrub shading, but I found o<strong>the</strong>r upright plants in a sheltered position on <strong>the</strong> golf course, and later <strong>the</strong><br />

late Paul Bowman found some similar N <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lagoon in a rootless ruined wartime building.<br />

As stated in Rich and Jermy (1998) page 212, Dr D. Eaton (not Easton) (<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>n Portsmouth<br />

Polytechnic Biology Department) grew plants from <strong>the</strong> seed from <strong>the</strong> prostrate population on <strong>the</strong><br />

shingle, and found that in cultivation <strong>the</strong>y grew upright like <strong>the</strong> 'ssp. purpureum' plants on and to <strong>the</strong><br />

N <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> golf course. I <strong>the</strong>refore concluded that ssp. forsteri was merely a prostrate form induced by<br />

habitat.<br />

However what I have described as 'upright' growth above was upright in a zigzag fashion, and not<br />

with a single vertical stem as Yeo describes. I never realised that crucial difference in <strong>the</strong> growth<br />

forms, and I am grateful to him for clarifying this. All <strong>the</strong> Hayling plants were and are <strong>the</strong>refore<br />

ssp.forsteri.<br />

In <strong>the</strong> quotation that Yeo makes from Baker, <strong>the</strong> latter is wrong both in stating that forsteri is<br />

defined by its prostrate habit, and in stating that it only grows at <strong>the</strong> rear <strong>of</strong> certain shingle beaches.<br />

Given shelter it grows upright in o<strong>the</strong>r localities, but in zigzag fashion.<br />

Even great men make mistakes, and I think that <strong>the</strong> late E.F. Warburg was probablY wrong when<br />

he confirmed a (presumably upright) specimen from near <strong>the</strong> Hayling (Sinah Common) golf clubhouse<br />

as ssp. purpureum (Brewis et al. p.188).<br />

In <strong>the</strong> light <strong>of</strong> my experience I would not be surprised if <strong>the</strong> past and present colonies in W. Sussex<br />

to which Yeo refers, are all ssp.forsteri, and that ssp. purpureum is a plant <strong>of</strong> SW Britain.<br />

References:<br />

BREWIS, A., BOWMAN, P., & ROSE, F. 1996. The Flora <strong>of</strong> Hampshire. Colchester: Harley Books.<br />

RICH, T.C.G., & JERMY, A.C. 1998. The Plant Crib 1998. <strong>BSBI</strong>: London.<br />

Yeo, P.F. 2003. <strong>BSBI</strong> News 93<br />

EDwARD PRATT, 7 Bay Close,Swanage. Dorset BH19 IRE


30 Notes and Articles<br />

BEE ORCHID (OPHRYS APIFERA) IN AYRSHIRE (V.C. 75)<br />

Historically Bee Orchid (Ophrys apifera) has always been exceedingly rare in Scotland, with no recent<br />

confirmed records in print. The earliest record in print for 0. apifera is a 1908 record from Southwick<br />

(v.c. 73) with a voucher at Edinburgh, while Summerhayes mentions an old occurrence in Lanarkshire<br />

v.c. 77. More recently <strong>the</strong> first edition <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>British</strong> Flora makes reference to unlocalised<br />

records from v.cc. 72, 73, 74, 75, 76 & 77 and <strong>the</strong>re is a 1980 record from Dolbeattie. There are no<br />

current records shown in Scotland in <strong>the</strong> New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora.<br />

It was thus, with great excitement that a single plant <strong>of</strong> 0. apifera was discovered on <strong>the</strong> 18 th <strong>of</strong><br />

August 2003 on an old industrial site in east Ayrshire. The single plant consisting <strong>of</strong> two stems had<br />

finished flowering and was fruiting pr<strong>of</strong>usely. The location has a rich flora including Broad-leaved<br />

Helleborine (Epipactis helleborine), Twayblade, (Listera ovata) and Common Spotted-orchid<br />

(Dactylorhiza fuchsii). The plant was growing in coarse grassland amongst Salix with <strong>the</strong> closest<br />

associates being Hedge-bedstraw (Galium mollugo), Red Clover (Trifolium pratense), Fairy Flax<br />

(Linum catharticum), Mouse-ear-hawkweed (Pilosella <strong>of</strong>ficinarum) and Glaucous Sedge (Carex<br />

flacca).<br />

Geographically <strong>the</strong> nearest locations are on <strong>the</strong> north coast <strong>of</strong> Ireland, and this leads one to<br />

speculate that <strong>the</strong> Scottish plant has arisen from seed blown on <strong>the</strong> south-westerly winds from Ireland.<br />

Generally <strong>the</strong> location has much open ground and appears suitable for fur<strong>the</strong>r colonisation by<br />

0. apifera specially in view <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> run, <strong>of</strong> mild winters, it will be interesting to see if this becomes a<br />

biological reality.<br />

BRIAN LANEY, 5 South Close, Long Buckby, Northants, NN6 7PX; tel.: 01327843847;<br />

email: brian@laneyl.fsnet.co.uk<br />

PAUL STANLEY, Mulberry House, The Orchard, Brighstone, Isle <strong>of</strong>Wight P030 4QU<br />

CLEAVERS: SIZE, SEEDLINGS & FROST RESISTANCE<br />

On arable land, Cleavers (Galium aparine) is now classified as 'one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> world's worst weeds'<br />

(Holm et al.) 1977). According to Grime et al. (1988) its seeds need a brief exposure to chilling, but<br />

subsequent germination can occur over a protracted period. Spring seedlings consist <strong>of</strong> some welladvanced<br />

plantlets with large cotyledons, and o<strong>the</strong>rs with just <strong>the</strong> emergent radicle.<br />

I use circles <strong>of</strong> Glyphosate to control <strong>the</strong> main perennial weeds (Nettles (Urtica dioica), Creeping<br />

Thistle (Cirsium arvense) in preparation for individual tree planting. Frost or fine, wet or dry,<br />

Cleavers seedlings appear on <strong>the</strong>se patches every single month <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> year, as well as on areas<br />

disturbed by moles, pheasants and badgers. Severe or prolonged frost can cause <strong>the</strong> seedlings to<br />

change colour or become flaccid, and even to collapse. This sequence, almost invariably lethal to<br />

vertical seedlings <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r species (excepting flattened rosettes, e.g. some frost-resistant thistle<br />

seedlings), is not fatal to Cleavers seedlings. They spring back, resuming rapid growth when less<br />

cold.<br />

The family Rubiaceae consists <strong>of</strong> 630 genera and over 10,200 species (Mabberley 1997); most<br />

members are tropical. However <strong>the</strong> Galium genus, with 300 species in all is cosmopolitan: Europe has<br />

nearly 150 species, and Turkey over 100 (Hanf 1983; Mabberley 1997). The vigorous, widespread,<br />

frost-tolerant, annual Cleavers is remarkable when compared with its numerous tropical rainforest<br />

relatives, trees, shrubs and lianes.<br />

As usual with phosphate- and nitrate-loving herbs, <strong>the</strong> average maximum heights given in most<br />

textbooks are grossly inadequate. Enfeebled maxima for Cleavers are 1.2m (Grime et at. 1988), and<br />

1.5m, (Hanf 1983) presumably based on crop heights. Stace (1977) gives <strong>the</strong> more realistic maximum<br />

<strong>of</strong> 3m. Some <strong>of</strong> my young 3-4m trees are heavily festooned to <strong>the</strong> top with Cleavers by late summer,<br />

or bent double by contracted dried tangles, usually mixed in with 2m+ stinging nettles. September<br />

weeding involves snapped saplings (if careless), stings to <strong>the</strong> face; and hair downwards smo<strong>the</strong>red in<br />

<strong>the</strong> small burrs! Under <strong>the</strong> tangles, next year's Cleavers seedlings and young plants have already


Notes and Articles 31<br />

begun. When weeded, new ones appear in October, November, December; and January onwards in<br />

<strong>the</strong> following year.<br />

References:<br />

GRIME, lP., HODGSON, J.G. & HUNT, R. 1988. Comparative plant ecology. CUP.<br />

HANF, M. 1983. The arable weeds <strong>of</strong> Europe with <strong>the</strong>ir seedlings and seeds. BASF (UK Ltd.).<br />

Ludwigshafen.<br />

HOLM, L.G., PLUNCKNETT, D.L., PANCHO, lV. & HERBERGER, J.P. 1977). The world's worst weeds.<br />

University Press <strong>of</strong> Hawaii, Honolulu.<br />

MABBERLEY, D.J. 1997. The plant book. CUP.<br />

STACE, C.A .. 1997. New Flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. 2nd edn. CUP.<br />

JACK OLIVER, High View, Rhyls Lane, Lockeridge, Nr Marlborough, Wilts. SN8 4 ED<br />

LEMNA MINUTA V: ROOT CAPS AND ROOT CHLOROPLASTS<br />

In <strong>the</strong> early 1990s, Least Duckweed (Lemna minuta) was spreading very rapidly on canals (Smith<br />

1990); Last 1990; Oliver 1991; Briggs 1992). Since that time, L. minuta seems to have become <strong>the</strong><br />

most common duckweed in Wilts., whe<strong>the</strong>r in water troughs and small ponds, or in rivers and lakes.<br />

Usually, but not always, <strong>the</strong> single root beneath <strong>the</strong> frond looks green, <strong>of</strong>ten with an intensified yellowgreen<br />

colourationjust above <strong>the</strong> root tip (compare Oliver 1993). I thought this worthy <strong>of</strong> fur<strong>the</strong>r investigation,<br />

and <strong>of</strong> comparisons with Common Duckweed (L. minor).<br />

Fig. 1 (all figs. on colour section, plate 4), taken through a microscope, shows two doubled-back<br />

L. minuta roots, clearly illustrating <strong>the</strong> root caps which are Imm long. (L. minor root caps (not<br />

pictured) measure 2-3mm). Slight greening can be seen behind <strong>the</strong> growing points.<br />

Fig. 2 shows ano<strong>the</strong>r much greener L. minuta root tip under higher magnification. Behind <strong>the</strong><br />

meristematic area (already green) and surrounding <strong>the</strong> central vascular cylinder (stele) <strong>the</strong>re seem to be<br />

dense masses <strong>of</strong> chIoroplasts measuring 3-51-\ (microns, or 3-5mm) across. This microphotography was<br />

on living wet preparations; but when covers lips were used and pressed down, <strong>the</strong> root caps can <strong>of</strong>ten be<br />

neatly squeezed <strong>of</strong>f. No chloroplasts were seen in <strong>the</strong> cells <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> extruded root caps.<br />

Fig. 3 shows <strong>the</strong> central parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> single root <strong>of</strong> L. minuta (width O.1mm) and L. minor next to<br />

each o<strong>the</strong>r. The L. minor rootlet is twice <strong>the</strong> width <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> L. minuta rootlet, but <strong>the</strong> latter is much more<br />

intensely green. At this magnification, <strong>the</strong> cell walls and stele are both very clear. Although not easily<br />

discernible, <strong>the</strong>re were a few scattered chloroplasts in some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> L. minor cells. Chloroplasts were<br />

abundant in <strong>the</strong> L. minuta root tissues, <strong>of</strong>ten several per cell.<br />

Fig. 4 again shows <strong>the</strong> central part <strong>of</strong> a L. minuta root under <strong>the</strong> highest magnification possible<br />

with a living wet preparation. Chloroplasts (3-51-\ across) are clearly visible within <strong>the</strong> cells.<br />

Refocusing at various depths into <strong>the</strong> root cylinder seems to show that <strong>the</strong> chloroplasts are in all root<br />

tissues (excepting <strong>the</strong> root-cap cells, see above), including <strong>the</strong> central vascular cylinder.<br />

It would be neat to explain <strong>the</strong> success <strong>of</strong> L. minuta in competition with L. minor in terms <strong>of</strong> its<br />

greener roots. However, <strong>the</strong> roots <strong>of</strong> L. minuta are not always green; and L. minor roots <strong>of</strong>ten are<br />

green, sometimes strongly so! The possible advantage is that L. minuta appears to grow faster in<br />

colder wea<strong>the</strong>r; under comparable conditions, L. minuta also seems to mobilise <strong>the</strong> chloroplasts behind<br />

<strong>the</strong> green meristematic root-tip region more rapidly than L. minor.<br />

Acknowledgement: Appreciation is given to Brian & Joan Davies for <strong>the</strong>ir help and expertise in<br />

selection and processing <strong>the</strong> digital photographs.<br />

References:<br />

BRlGGs, J. 1992. Lemna minuta and Azollajiliculoides in canals. <strong>BSBI</strong> News 60: 20.<br />

LAST, B. 1990. Lemna minuscula in Wiltshire. <strong>BSBI</strong> News 56: 9-10.<br />

OLIVER, J.E. 1991. Spread <strong>of</strong> Lemna minuscula in Wilts. <strong>BSBI</strong> News 58: 10.


32<br />

OUVER, J.E. 1993. Lemna minuta IV: green roots. <strong>BSBI</strong> News: 64: 30.<br />

SMITH, J.E. 1990. Surrey Flora Committee Newsletter (Feb) 3.<br />

JACK OUVER, High View, Rhyls Lane, Lockeridge, Nr Marlborough, Wilts. SN8 4 ED<br />

Notes and Articles<br />

CAREX MURICATA SSP. MURICATA IN SOUTHERN ENGLAND<br />

Carex muricata (Prickly Sedge) is part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> difficult spiked sedge complex and has two subspecies.<br />

The common ssp. lamprocarpa occurs generally on 'roadsides ,and waste ground, more <strong>of</strong>ten on <strong>the</strong><br />

heavier and damper soils, though also found on chalk' (Jermy, Chater & David, 1982). It is 'frequent'<br />

throughout sou<strong>the</strong>rn and especially midland England and its distribution has, <strong>of</strong> course, been recently<br />

updated (Preston, Pearman & Dines, 2002). The rare ssp. muricata occurs on limestone and was<br />

thought to be restricted to this substrate and when its distribution was reviewed in <strong>the</strong> Red Data Book<br />

(Roberts, 1999) it was known from only 4 localities, having disappeared from Gloucestershire in 1983.<br />

In 2000 and 2001 it was discovered in two adjoining sites in Shropshire, where it grows, as in <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

localities, in fairly open limestone grassland. I have seen it at <strong>the</strong> latter sites, in Yorkshire and in<br />

North Wales, thanks to <strong>the</strong> help <strong>of</strong> Sarah Whild, Mike Porter & Michael Fo1ey and Jean Green respectively,<br />

and so by 2001 I was fairly familiar with <strong>the</strong> appearance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> rare subspecies.<br />

In 2002 I was asked by <strong>the</strong> Berks., Bucks. & Oxon. Wildlife Trust to produce updated plant lists<br />

for <strong>the</strong> two reserves which I manage, Millfield Wood, near High Wycombe (SU89S) and Windsor<br />

Hill, near Princes Risborough (SP80G). Both <strong>the</strong>se reserves are in Bucks. (v.c. 24), both are on SW<br />

facing slopes on chalk (though both with an acid top) and both have an area <strong>of</strong> roughly cleared<br />

woodland with equally rough grassy patches. In nei<strong>the</strong>r reserve had C. muricata ssp. lamprocarpa<br />

been previously recorded; it is an uncommon plant in S. Bucks. and I know <strong>of</strong> it from only three sites,<br />

one in each <strong>of</strong> 3 different hectads. Richard Fitter had once shown it to me some 600m from <strong>the</strong><br />

reserve at Windsor Hill but this site was destroyed long ago during timber working.<br />

So it was with some surprise that, early in 2002, I discovered C. muricata at <strong>the</strong> lower edge <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

cleared woodland in Millfield Wood. I was even more surprised to find it again a few weeks later, in a<br />

similar situation, at Windsor Hill and more so, when, looking at <strong>the</strong> plants carefully <strong>the</strong>y all appeared<br />

to be ssp. muricata. Specimens were sent to Mike Porter and Michael Fo1ey, both very familiar with<br />

<strong>the</strong> subspecies. They in turn showed <strong>the</strong>m to Arthur Chater and Clive Jermy and all four confirmed<br />

<strong>the</strong> identification. In 2003 Mike and Michael visited Millfield Wood and several more clumps were<br />

found, bringing <strong>the</strong> total to about 10 (and 5 for Windsor Hill). David Pearman was subsequently sent<br />

specimens and agreed with <strong>the</strong> identification. The fruiting stems are tall and stiff, just as in <strong>the</strong><br />

nor<strong>the</strong>rn plants but need to be protected from Muntjac, which, in 2002, ate all <strong>the</strong> Windsor Hill plants<br />

and most at Millfield Wood.<br />

BBOWT's well-known Warburg Reserve is at Bix Bottom, near Henley (SU78D) in Oxfordshire<br />

(v.c. 23) and is well-studied and well-recorded. In older plant records C. muricata ssp. muricata was<br />

listed but subsequently removed (no doubt since someone pointed out that this could not possibly be<br />

correct!). It seemed <strong>the</strong>refore worthwhile investigating and in July 2003 I visited <strong>the</strong> reserve. Precise<br />

localities for C. muricata <strong>of</strong> ei<strong>the</strong>r subspecies were vague but <strong>the</strong> last possible site, <strong>the</strong> edge <strong>of</strong> a grassy<br />

ride, shaded by trees at <strong>the</strong> edge <strong>of</strong> woodland on chalk, looked promising. The sedge was here and it<br />

too proved to be ssp. muricata (confirmed by Mike Porter) albeit ra<strong>the</strong>r spindly, due presumably to <strong>the</strong><br />

shading.<br />

Thus in <strong>the</strong> past two years Carex muricata ssp. muricata has been found in open woodland on<br />

chalk in three localities. I can hardly believe that I have found <strong>the</strong> only sites for it. There must be<br />

more, and I hope this note will encourage o<strong>the</strong>rs to go looking for it in 2004 and subsequently. It may<br />

well be worth looking at areas <strong>of</strong> recently felled or thinned woodland on chalk and limestone, as in<br />

several <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> known sites <strong>the</strong>re has been a reappearance, or marked increase in abundance, following<br />

opening up <strong>of</strong> woodland. It could be that <strong>the</strong> sites are known but examination has been superficial<br />

'because it can't be muricata' or even worse, it has been overlooked 'because it's only a sedge'!


Notes and Articles 33<br />

My thanks to all those mentioned for steering me to <strong>the</strong> right places and for identitying specimens.<br />

Full information on <strong>the</strong> localities referred to is being collated and a review <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> distribution <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

taxon is in preparation<br />

References:<br />

JERMY, A.C., CHATER, A.O. & DAY ID, R.W. 1982. Sedges o/<strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. <strong>BSBI</strong>, London.<br />

Preston, C.D., PEARMAN, D.A. & DINES, T.D. 2002. New Atlas o/<strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora. ODP.<br />

ROBERTs, FJ. in WIGGINGTON, M.J. <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books, I, Vascular Plants, 3,d edn. JNCC.<br />

ALAN SHOWLER, 12 Wedgwood Drive, Hughenden Valley, High Wycombe, Bucks., HP14 4PA<br />

BOTANY (TALKING FLOWERS) IN LITERATURE<br />

With <strong>the</strong> holidays in mind, herewith by way <strong>of</strong> entertainment, an extract (pp 98-101) from <strong>the</strong> surreal<br />

world <strong>of</strong> Lewis Carroll's (i.e. Charles Lutwidge Dodgson; 1832-98) Through <strong>the</strong> Looking-Glass and<br />

What A lice Found There (1872).<br />

Having declared that she [Alice 1 'should see <strong>the</strong> garden far better' from '<strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> that hill' and<br />

having more than once walked towards it (only, because she is in Looking-Glass Land, she is walking<br />

away from it) and repeatedly ended up at a house instead, she tries once more:<br />

... This time she came upon a large flower-bed, with a border <strong>of</strong> daisies, and a willowtree<br />

growing in <strong>the</strong> middle.<br />

'0 Tiger-lily,' said Alice, addressing herself to one that was waving about gracefully<br />

in <strong>the</strong> wind, 'I wish you could talk!'<br />

'We can talk,' said <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily: 'when <strong>the</strong>re's anybody worth talking to.'<br />

Alice was so astonished that she couldn't speak for a minute: it quite seemed to take<br />

her breath away. At length, as <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily only went on waving about, she spoke<br />

again, in a timid voice almost in a whisper. 'And can all <strong>the</strong> flowers talk?'<br />

'As well as you can,' said <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily. 'And a great deal louder.'<br />

'It isn't manners for us to begin, you know,' said <strong>the</strong> Rose, 'and 1 really was<br />

wondering when you'd speak! Said I to myself, "Her face has got some sense in it,<br />

though it's not a clever one!" Still, you're <strong>the</strong> right colour, and that goes a long way.'<br />

'I don't care about <strong>the</strong> colour,' <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily remarked. 'If only her petals curled up a<br />

little more, she'd be all right.'<br />

'Alice didn't like being criticised, so she began asking questions: 'Aren't you<br />

sometimes frightened at being planted out here, with nobody to take care <strong>of</strong> you?'<br />

'There's <strong>the</strong> tree in <strong>the</strong> middle,' said <strong>the</strong> Rose. 'What else is it good for?'<br />

'But what could it do, if any danger came?' Alice asked.<br />

'It could bark,' said <strong>the</strong> Rose.<br />

'It says "Bough-wough!" , cried a Daisy: 'that's why it's branches are called<br />

boughs!'<br />

'Didn't you know that?' cried ano<strong>the</strong>r Daisy, and here <strong>the</strong>y all began shouting<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r, till <strong>the</strong> air seemed quite full <strong>of</strong> little shrill voices. 'Silence, every one <strong>of</strong> you!'<br />

cried <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily, waving itself passionately from side to side and trembling with<br />

excitement. 'They know I can't get at <strong>the</strong>m!' it panted, bending its quivering head<br />

towards Alice, 'or <strong>the</strong>y wouldn't dare do it!'<br />

'Never mind!' Alice said in a soothing tone, and stooping down to <strong>the</strong> daisies, who<br />

were just beginning again, she whispered, 'If you don't hold your tongues, I'll pick<br />

you!'<br />

There was silence in a moment, and several <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> pink daisies turned white.<br />

'That's right!' said <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily. 'The daisies are worst <strong>of</strong> all. When one speaks,<br />

<strong>the</strong>y all begin toge<strong>the</strong>r, and it's enough to make one wi<strong>the</strong>r to hear <strong>the</strong> way <strong>the</strong>y go on!'


34 Notes and Articles<br />

'How is it you can all talk so nicely?' Alice said, hoping to get it into a better<br />

temper by a compliment. 'I've been in many gardens before, but none <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flowers<br />

could talk.'<br />

'Put your hand down, and feel <strong>the</strong> ground,' said <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily. 'Then you'll know<br />

why.'<br />

Alice did so. 'It's very hard,' she said, 'but I don't see what that has to do with it.'<br />

'In most gardens,' <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily said, '<strong>the</strong>y make <strong>the</strong> beds too s<strong>of</strong>t - so that <strong>the</strong><br />

flowers are always asleep.'<br />

This sounded a very good reason, and Alice was quite pleased to know it. 'I never<br />

thought <strong>of</strong> that before!' she said.<br />

'It's my opinion you never think at all,' <strong>the</strong> Rose said in a ra<strong>the</strong>r severe tone.<br />

'I never saw anybody that looked stupider,' a Violet said, so suddenly, that Alice<br />

quite jumped; for it hadn't spoken before.<br />

'Hold your tongue!' cried <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily. 'As if you ever saw anybody! You keep<br />

your head under <strong>the</strong> leaves, and snore away <strong>the</strong>re till you know no more what's going<br />

on in <strong>the</strong> world, than if you were a bud!'<br />

'Are <strong>the</strong>re any more people in <strong>the</strong> garden besides me?' Alice said, not choosing to<br />

notice <strong>the</strong> Rose's last remark.<br />

'There's one o<strong>the</strong>r flower in <strong>the</strong> garden that can move about like you,' said <strong>the</strong><br />

Rose. 'I wonder how you do it -' ('You're always wondering,' said <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily), 'but<br />

she's more bushy than you are.'<br />

'Is she like me?' Alice asked eagerly, for <strong>the</strong> thought crossed her mind, 'There's<br />

ano<strong>the</strong>r little girl in <strong>the</strong> garden somewhere!'<br />

'Well, she has <strong>the</strong> same awkward shape as you,' <strong>the</strong> Rose said: 'but she's redderand<br />

her petals are shorter, I think.'<br />

'Her petals are done up close, almost like a dahlia,' <strong>the</strong> Tiger-lily interrupted, 'not<br />

tumbled about-anyhow, like yours.'<br />

'But that's not your fault,' <strong>the</strong> Rose added kindly: 'you're beginning to fade, you<br />

know - and <strong>the</strong>n one can't help one's petals getting a little untidy.'<br />

Alice didn't like this idea at all: so, to change <strong>the</strong> subject, she asked, 'Does she ever<br />

come out here?'<br />

'I dare say you'll see her soon,' said <strong>the</strong> Rose. 'She's one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> thorny kind.'<br />

'Where does she wear <strong>the</strong> thorns?' Alice asked with some curiosity.<br />

'Why, all round her head, <strong>of</strong> course,' <strong>the</strong> Rose replied. 'I was wondering you hadn't<br />

got some too. 1 thought it was <strong>the</strong> regular rule.'<br />

'She's coming!' cried <strong>the</strong> Larkspur. 'I hear her footstep, thump, thump, along <strong>the</strong><br />

gravel-walk! '<br />

Alice looked round eagerly, and found that it was <strong>the</strong> Red Queen. 'She's grown a<br />

good deal!' was her first remark. She had indeed: when Alice first found her in <strong>the</strong><br />

ashes, she had been only three inches high - and here she was, half a head taller than<br />

Alice herself!<br />

'It's <strong>the</strong> fresh air that does it,' said <strong>the</strong> Rose: 'wonderfully fine air it is, out here.'<br />

'I think I'll go and meet her,' said Alice, for though <strong>the</strong> flowers were very interesting,<br />

she felt that it would be far grander to have a talk with a real Queen.<br />

'You can't possibly do that,' said <strong>the</strong> Rose: '/ should advise you to walk <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r<br />

way .. '<br />

Reference:<br />

CARROLL, L. 1995. Alice in Wonderland. Ware, Hertfordshire: Wordsworth Editions Limited.<br />

MARGOT E. SOUCHIER, 26A Dryden Avenue, LONDON, W7 1ES. Email: m.e.souchier@amserve.net


36 Conservation News & Views<br />

CONSERVATION NEWS & VIEWS<br />

NEW PLANT STATUS LISTS FOR GREAT BRITAIN<br />

The Species Status Assessment Project at JNCC is responsible for maintaining and updating Red Data<br />

Lists, and also <strong>the</strong> list <strong>of</strong> 'Species <strong>of</strong> Conservation Concern'. As a part <strong>of</strong> this project, <strong>the</strong> JNCC<br />

website (http://www.jncc.gov.uklspecies/Plants/default.htm) includes lists <strong>of</strong> all vascular plants, charophytes,<br />

bryophytes and lichens for which <strong>the</strong>re is statutory protection or which are considered threatened,<br />

rare or scarce. The lists <strong>of</strong> threatened, rare and scarce species have all recently been updated,<br />

and <strong>the</strong> lists for vascular plants now take account <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora<br />

(Preston, Pearman & Dines, 2002).<br />

The IUCN criteria have been used to assess <strong>the</strong> threat status <strong>of</strong> species. For vascular plants, <strong>the</strong><br />

result <strong>of</strong> this was <strong>the</strong> publication <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Data List, included in <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books 1: Vascular<br />

plants (3,d Edn., Wigginton, 1999). The ruCN categories currently used for vascular plants are:<br />

• Extinct (EX)<br />

• Extinct in <strong>the</strong> Wild (EW)<br />

Critically Endangered (CR)<br />

• Endangered (EN)<br />

• Vulnerable (VU)<br />

• Data deficient (DD)<br />

Those taxa in <strong>the</strong> categories CR, EN and VU are considered to be threatened. This work has not been<br />

updated during <strong>the</strong> recent review, although one species has been removed from <strong>the</strong> Extinct category<br />

(Hydrilla verticillata: now Nationally Rare) and several species have been removed because <strong>the</strong> New<br />

Atlas has classified <strong>the</strong>m as neophytes. Only those taxa which are classified as 'native', 'native or<br />

alien', or as 'archaeophyte' are included in <strong>the</strong> new status lists. Fur<strong>the</strong>r review <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Data List<br />

may occur following <strong>the</strong> report <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Vascular Plant Working Group in 2005 (this group is working<br />

on <strong>the</strong> list <strong>of</strong> Species <strong>of</strong> Conservation Concern ra<strong>the</strong>r than <strong>the</strong> Red Data List, it includes David<br />

Pearman representing <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> and is chaired by Lynne Farrell). In particular, <strong>the</strong> criteria used for <strong>the</strong><br />

'Near threatened' category will be reviewed, this review has already occurred for lichens (see<br />

A Conservation Evaluation <strong>of</strong> <strong>British</strong> Lichens, Woods & Coppins, 2003). It is also hoped that all<br />

<strong>British</strong> taxa will be assessed using IUCN criteria in <strong>the</strong> near future, currently only rare taxa and a few<br />

o<strong>the</strong>rs have been assessed.<br />

In addition to <strong>the</strong> threat status, <strong>the</strong> new lists also show <strong>the</strong> rarity status. This has been based<br />

entirely on <strong>the</strong> data from <strong>the</strong> New Atlas. Two categories are in use: Nationally Rare (NR) and<br />

Nationally Scarce (NS). The definition for <strong>the</strong>se categories is currently <strong>the</strong> following:<br />

NR Occurring in fewer than 16 hectads in Great Britain and <strong>the</strong> Isle <strong>of</strong> Man<br />

NS Occurring in 16-100 hectads in Great Britain and <strong>the</strong> Isle <strong>of</strong> Man<br />

These definitions are also under review by <strong>the</strong> Vascular Plant Working Group, and it is likely that <strong>the</strong>y<br />

will be changed following <strong>the</strong> report by that group in 2005. In <strong>the</strong> interim, new lists have been<br />

prepared from <strong>the</strong> number <strong>of</strong>hectads in <strong>the</strong> New Atlas in <strong>the</strong> most recent date class (1987-1999) for all<br />

mapped taxa classified as 'native', 'native or alien', or as 'archaeophyte'. Only those hectads in which<br />

<strong>the</strong> taxon is considered native have been counted for native taxa, for archaeophytes all current records<br />

have been counted. For those taxa which are considered to be under-recorded in <strong>the</strong> New Atlas,<br />

records from all date classes have been included. A few taxa are considered to be so under-recorded<br />

that <strong>the</strong>y cannot currently be assigned a rarity status, <strong>the</strong>se may well be classified as Data deficient<br />

when <strong>the</strong> Red Data Lists are reviewed. Maybe <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> could organise some field meetings to try to<br />

target records for <strong>the</strong>se poorly known taxa?


Conservation News & Views 37<br />

There are some notable changes compared to <strong>the</strong> old Nationally Rare and Nationally Scarce lists<br />

(Nationally Rare was based on <strong>the</strong> Near threatened as defined in <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books 1: Vascular<br />

plants and Nationally Scarce was based on Scarce Plants in Britain, Stewart, Pearman & Preston,<br />

1994). A number <strong>of</strong> archaeophytes are included for <strong>the</strong> first time, <strong>the</strong>se include: Briza minor,<br />

Camelina sativa, Carum carvi, Chenopodium glaucum, Chenopodium urbicum, Lolium temulentum,<br />

Mespi/us germanica, Peucedanum ostruthium and Rumex pseudoalpinus. A considerable number <strong>of</strong><br />

subspecies are also included for <strong>the</strong> first time.<br />

Acknowledgements<br />

I would like to thank Simon Leach <strong>of</strong> English Nature and Deborah Procter <strong>of</strong> JNCC for <strong>the</strong>ir input into<br />

this review. O<strong>the</strong>r members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Vascular Plant Working Group have also provided comments. In<br />

particular I would like to acknowledge <strong>the</strong> tremendous work <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> BSBr in producing <strong>the</strong> New Atlas,<br />

without which this review would have been impossible.<br />

References<br />

PRESTON, C.D., PEARMAN, D.A. & DINES, T.D. 2002. New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora. OUP,<br />

Oxford.<br />

STEW ART, A., PEARMAN, D.A. & PRESTON, C.D. 1994. Scarce Plants in Britain. JNCC, Peterborough.<br />

WIGGINTON, M.J. 1999. <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books 1: Vascular plants. 3,d Edn. JNCC, Peterborough.<br />

WOODS, R.G. & COPPINS, B.l 2003. A Conservation Evaluation <strong>of</strong> <strong>British</strong> Lichens. <strong>British</strong> Lichen<br />

<strong>Society</strong>, London.<br />

CHRIS CHEFFINGS, Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Monkstone House, City Road, Peterborough,<br />

PEl lJY.<br />

Extinct<br />

Arnoseris minima (Iamb's succory)<br />

Carex davalliana (Davall's sedge)<br />

Galeopsis segetum (downy hemp-nettle)<br />

Holosteum umbellatum Gagged chickweed)<br />

Neotinea maeulata (dense-flowered orchid)<br />

Dtanthus maritimus (cottonweed)<br />

Extinct in <strong>the</strong> Wild<br />

Agrostemma githago (corn cockle)<br />

Bromus interruptus i (interrupted brome)<br />

Bupleurum rotundifolium (thorow-wax)<br />

NEW STATUS LISTS<br />

Pinguicula alpina (alpine butterwort)<br />

Rubus arcticus (arctic bramble)<br />

Spiran<strong>the</strong>s aestivalis (summer lady's-tresses)<br />

Tephroseris palustris ssp. congestus (marsh fleawort)<br />

Trichophorum alpinum (cotton deergrass)<br />

Euphorbia peplis (purple spurge)<br />

Sagina boydii (Boyd's pearlwort)<br />

Saxifraga rosacea ssp. rosacea (Irish saxifrage)<br />

iClassed as a neophyte by <strong>the</strong> New Atlas, but not currently known from outside <strong>the</strong> UK.<br />

Critically Endangered<br />

Alisma gramineum (ribbon-leaved water-plantain)<br />

Apium repens (creeping marshwort)<br />

Atriplex pedunculata (pedunculate sea-purslane)<br />

Carex depauperata (starved wood-sedge)<br />

Carex muricata ssp. muricata (prickly sedge)<br />

Cephalan<strong>the</strong>ra rubra (red helleborine)<br />

Corrigiola litoralis (strapwort)<br />

Cypripedium caleeolus (Iady's-slipper)<br />

Daetylorhiza incarnata ssp. ochroleuca (early<br />

marsh-orchid)<br />

Epipogium aphyllum (ghost orchid)<br />

Filago gallica (narrow-leaved cudweed)<br />

Galium tricornutum (corn cleavers)<br />

Gentianella ciliata (fringed gentian)<br />

Gnaphalium luteoalbum (Jersey cudweed)<br />

Schoenopleetus triqueter (triangular club-rush)<br />

Scleranthus perennis ssp. perennis (perennial knawel)<br />

Senecio paludosus (fen ragwort)<br />

Sorbus domestica (service-tree)<br />

Sorbus leptophylla (a whitebeam)<br />

Sorbus leyana (Ley's whitebeam)<br />

Sorbus wilmottiana (a whitebeam)<br />

Valerianella rimosa (broad-fruited cornsalad)


40<br />

Chenopodium urbicum (upright goosefoot)<br />

Corynephorus canescens (grey hair-grass)<br />

Crepis mollis (nor<strong>the</strong>rn hawk's-beard)<br />

Cystopteris montana (mountain bladder-fern)<br />

Dactylorhiza lapponica (Lap land marsh-orchid)<br />

Dactylorhiza majalis (western marsh-orchid)<br />

Diphasiastrum complanatum (Issler's c1ubmoss)<br />

Draba aizoides (yellow whitlowgrass)<br />

Dryopteris cristata (crested buckler-fern)<br />

Eleocharis austriaca (nor<strong>the</strong>rn spike-rush)<br />

Erica ciliaris (Dorset heath)<br />

Erica vagans (Cornish heath)<br />

Eriocaulon aquaticum (pipewort)<br />

Euphrasia campbelliae (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasia heslop-harrisonii (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasia marshallii (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasia rivularis (an eyebright)<br />

Galium constrictum (slender marsh-bed straw)<br />

Galium pumilum (slender bed straw)<br />

Genista pilosa (hairy greenweed)<br />

Genista tinctoria ssp. littoralis (dyer's greenweed)<br />

Gentiana verna (spring gentian)<br />

Gladiolus illyricus (wild gladiolus)<br />

Helian<strong>the</strong>mum apenninum (white rock-rose)<br />

Herniaria ciliolata (fringed rupturewort)<br />

Herniaria glabra (smooth rupturewort)<br />

Hierochloe odorata (holy-grass)<br />

Hydrilla verticillata (Esthwaite waterweed)<br />

Hypericum linariifolium (toadflax-leaved<br />

St John's-wort)<br />

Illecebrum verticillatum (coral-necklace)<br />

Isoetes histrix (land quillwort)<br />

Juncus capitatus (dwarf rush)<br />

Juniperus communis ssp. hemisphaerica Guniper)<br />

Kobresia simpliciuscula (false sedge)<br />

Koeleria vallesiana (Somerset hair-grass)<br />

Koenigia islandica (Iceland-purslane)<br />

Lamiastrum galeobdolon ssp. galeobdolon (yellow<br />

archangel)<br />

Limonium bellidifolium (matted sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium binervosum ssp. anglicum (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium binervosum ssp. binervosum (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Conservation News & Views<br />

Limonium binervosum ssp. saxonicum (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium britannicum ssp. britannicum (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium britannicum ssp. celticum (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium britannicum ssp. coombense (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium britannicum ssp. transcanalis (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium recurvum ssp. humile (a rock sea-lavender)<br />

Lithospermum purpureocaeruleum (purple gromwell)<br />

Lolium temulentum (dame I)<br />

Ludwigia palustris (Hampshire-purslane)<br />

Luzula arcuata (curved wood-rush)<br />

Melampyrum cristatum (crested cow-wheat)<br />

Mibora minima (early sand-grass)<br />

Minuartia rubella (mountain sandwort)<br />

Myosotis alpestris (alpine forget-me-not)<br />

Ornithopus pinnatus (orange bird's-foot)<br />

Orobanche reticulata (thistle broomrape)<br />

Oxytropis halleri (purple oxytropis)<br />

Peucedanum <strong>of</strong>ficinale (hog's fennel)<br />

Phleum phleoides (purple-stem cat's-tail)<br />

Polemonium caeruleum (Jacob's-ladder)<br />

Polycarpon tetraphyllum (four-leaved allseed)<br />

Potamogeton nodosus (Loddon pondweed)<br />

Potamogeton ruti/us (Shetland pondweed)<br />

Potentillafruticosa (shrubby cinquefoil)<br />

Ranunculus flammula ssp. minimus' (lesser spearwort)<br />

Rumex acetosa ssp. hibernicus' (sorrel)<br />

Salicornia obscurei' (glaucous glasswort)<br />

Saxifraga rivularis (highland saxifrage)<br />

Senecio cambrensis (Welsh groundsel)<br />

Serapias parviflora (small-flowered tongue-orchid)<br />

Si/ene otites (Spanish catchfly)<br />

Sorbus lancastriensis (a whitebeam)<br />

Stetlaria nemorum ssp. montana' (wood stitchwort)<br />

Stratiotes aloides (water-soldier)<br />

Thymus serpyllum (Breckland thyme)<br />

Trichophorum cespi/osum ssp. cespitosum'<br />

(deergrass)<br />

Trinia glauca (honewort)<br />

Viola rupestris (Teesdale violet)<br />

Woodsia alpina (alpine woodsia)<br />

I Included in <strong>the</strong> New Atlas, but recent research suggests that this is not a subspecies.<br />

2 In fewer than 16 hectads. if all date classes are included.<br />

Nationally scarce taxa not in an IUCN category<br />

Aceras anthropophorum (man orchid)<br />

Aconitum napellus ssp. napellus (monk's-hood)<br />

Actaea spicata (baneberry)<br />

Adiantum capillus-veneris (maidenhair fern)<br />

Ajuga pyramidalis (pyramidal bugle)<br />

Alchemilla glaucescens (a lady's-mantle)<br />

Alchemilla glomerulans (a lady's-mantle)<br />

Alchemilla wichurae (a lady's-mantle)<br />

Allium ampeloprasum (wild leek)<br />

Allium schoenoprasum (chives)<br />

Alopecurus borealis (alpine foxtail)<br />

Alopecurus bulbosus (bulbous foxtail)<br />

Althaea <strong>of</strong>ficinalis (marsh-mallow)<br />

Anagallis arvensis ssp.foemina (blue pimpernel)


Colour Section<br />

Erigeron borealis at Meall na Samhna, its most<br />

sou<strong>the</strong>rly world location.<br />

Photo J .A. Edgington © 2003<br />

Digilalis with aberrant terminal flower, found in a<br />

London garden.<br />

Photo J. Moore © 2003<br />

Pete Selby and friends (L to R Kathryn Hart, Eric Clement, Pete Selby & Debbie Allan) botanising at<br />

Priddy's Hard, Gosport, shortly before his death. The plant in <strong>the</strong> foreground is Amaranthus bouchonii.<br />

Photo J.A. Norton © 2003


2<br />

Trifolium stellatum flowers and fruit at<br />

Browndown, Gosport, V.c. 11.<br />

Photo l.A. Norton © 2002<br />

Malva alcea x M. moschata in garden,<br />

Burgess Hill, Sussex.<br />

Photo B. Radcliffe © 2003<br />

Colour Section<br />

Disturbed habitat <strong>of</strong> Trifolium stellatum with Ulex europaeus<br />

in background. Photo LA. Norton © 2002<br />

A wild plant <strong>of</strong> Praeger's Heath (Erica xstuartii) with<br />

coloured young shoots, near Roundstone, Connemara,<br />

Co. Galway. Photo RC. Nelson © 1999


Conservation News & Views<br />

Arabis petraea (nor<strong>the</strong>rn rock-cress)<br />

Arctostaphylos alpinus (alpine bearberry)<br />

Arum italicum ssp. neglectum (Italian lords-and-Iadies)<br />

Asplenium obovatum (lanceolate spleenwort)<br />

Asplenium septentrionale (forked spleenwort)<br />

Athyrium distentifolium (alpine lady-fern)<br />

Atriplex longipes (long-stalked orache)<br />

Atriplex praecox (early orache)<br />

Betula nana (dwarf birch)<br />

Brassica oleracea (wild cabbage)<br />

Briza minor (lesser quaking-grass)<br />

Bromopsis benekenii (lesser hairy-brome)<br />

Bromus hordeaceus ssp.ferronii (s<strong>of</strong>t-brome)<br />

Bromus hordeaceus ssp. thominei' (s<strong>of</strong>t-brome)<br />

Bromus secalinus (rye brome)<br />

Bupleurum tenuissimum (slender hare's-ear)<br />

Callitriche truncata (short-leaved water-starwort)<br />

Calystegia sepium ssp. roseata' (hedge bindweed)<br />

Camelina sativa (gold-<strong>of</strong>-pleasure)<br />

Campanula patula (spreading bellflower)<br />

Cardamine bulbifera (coralroot)<br />

Cardamine impatiens (narrow-leaved bitter-cress)<br />

Carex appropinquata (fibrous tussock-sedge)<br />

Carex atrata (black alpine-sedge)<br />

Carex capillaris (hair sedge)<br />

Carex digitata (fingered sedge)<br />

Carex divisa (divided sedge)<br />

Carex elongata (elongated sedge)<br />

Carex ericetorum (rare spring-sedge)<br />

Carex humilis ( dwarf sedge)<br />

Carex magellanica (taB bog-sedge)<br />

Carex maritima (curved sedge)<br />

Carex montana (s<strong>of</strong>t-leaved sedge)<br />

Carex punctata (dotted sedge)<br />

Carex rupestris (rock sedge)<br />

Carex saxatilis (russet sedge)<br />

Carex vaginata (shea<strong>the</strong>d sedge)<br />

Carum carvi (caraway)<br />

Centaurium littorale (seaside centaury)<br />

Cephalan<strong>the</strong>ra longifolia (sword-leaved helleborine)<br />

Cerastium alpinum (alpine mouse-ear)<br />

Cerastium arcticum (arctic mouse-ear)<br />

Cerastium cerastoides (starwort mouse-ear)<br />

Cerastium pumilum (dwarf mouse-ear)<br />

Chenopodium chenopodioides (salt marsh goosefoot)<br />

Chenopodium glaucum (oak-leaved goosefoot)<br />

Cicendiafiliformis (yellow centaury)<br />

Cicuta virosa (cowbane)<br />

Circaea alpina (alpine enchanter's-nightshade)<br />

Clinopodium calamintha (lesser calamint)<br />

Cochlearia micacea' (mountain scurvygrass)<br />

Coincya monensis ssp. monensis (Isle <strong>of</strong> Man<br />

cabbage)<br />

Corallorhiza trifida (coral root orchid)<br />

Crassula tillaea (mossy stonecrop)<br />

Cuscuta europaea (greater dodder)<br />

Cyperus longus (galingale)<br />

Dactylorhiza incarnata ssp. coccinea (early<br />

marsh-orchid)<br />

Dactylorhiza traunsteineri (narrow-leaved<br />

marsh-orchid)<br />

Daphne mezereum (mezereon)<br />

Daucus carota ssp. gummifer (sea carrot)<br />

Deschampsia setacea (bog hair-grass)<br />

Dianthus deltoides (maiden pink)<br />

Draba muralis (wall whitlowgrass)<br />

Draba norvegica (rock whitlowgrass)<br />

Dryas octopetala (mountain avens)<br />

Dryopteris submontana (rigid buckler-fern)<br />

Elatine hydropiper (eight-stamened waterwort)<br />

Epipactis atrorubens (dark-red helleborine)<br />

Epipactis leptochila (narrow-lipped heBeborine)<br />

Epipactis phyllan<strong>the</strong>s (green-flowered helleborine)<br />

Equisetum pratense (shady horsetail)<br />

Equisetum variegatum (variegated horsetail)<br />

Erodium lebelii' (sticky stork's-bill)<br />

Euphrasia arctica ssp. arctica' (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasiafoulaensis (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasia ostenfeldii' (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasiapseudokerneri (an eyebright)<br />

Euphrasia rostkoviana ssp. montana' (an eyebright)<br />

F allopia dumetorum (copse-bindweed)<br />

Festuca arenaria (rush-leaved fescue)<br />

Frankenia laevis (sea-heath)<br />

Fritillaria meleagris (fritillary)<br />

Fumaria occidentalis (western ramping-fumitory)<br />

Fumaria parviflora (fine-leaved fumitory)<br />

Fumaria purpurea (purple ramping-fumitory)<br />

Fumaria vaillantii (few-flowered fumitory)<br />

Galeopsis angustifolia (red hemp-nettle)<br />

Galium parisiense (wall bedstraw)<br />

Gastridium ventricosum (nit-grass)<br />

Gaudiniafragilis (French oat-grass)<br />

Gentianapneumonan<strong>the</strong> (marsh gentian)<br />

Gentianella anglica (early gentian)<br />

Gentianella germanica (Chiltern gentian)<br />

Geranium purpureum (little-robin)<br />

Gnaphalium norvegicum (highland cudweed)<br />

Gymnocarpium robertianum (limestone oak-fern)<br />

Helian<strong>the</strong>mum oelandicum ssp. incanum (hoary<br />

rock-rose)<br />

Helleborusfoetidus (stinking hellebore)<br />

Herminium monorchis (musk orchid)<br />

Hippophae rhamnoides (sea buckthorn)<br />

Hordelymus europaeus (wood barley)<br />

Hordeum marinum (sea barley)<br />

Hornungia petraea (hutchinsia)<br />

Hypericum undulatum (wavy St John's-wort)<br />

lberis amara (candy tuft)<br />

lmpatiens noli-tangere (touch-me-not balsam)<br />

lnula crithmoides (golden-samphire)<br />

lsatis tinctoria (woad)<br />

Juncus acutus (sharp rush)<br />

Juncus alpinoarticulatus (alpine rush)<br />

41


42<br />

Juncus balticus(Baltic rush)<br />

Juncus biglumis (two-flowered rush)<br />

Juncus castaneus (chestnut rush)<br />

Juncus filiformis(thread rush)<br />

Lathyrus aphaca(yellow vetchling)<br />

Lathyrusjaponicus (sea pea)<br />

Lathyrus palustris (marsh pea)<br />

Lepidium latifolium (dittander)<br />

Leucojum aestivum ssp. aestivum (summer snowflake)<br />

Limonium humile (lax-flowered sea-lavender)<br />

Limonium procerum ssp. procerum (a rock<br />

sea-lavender)<br />

Limosella aquatica (mudwort)<br />

Linnaea borealis (twinflower)<br />

Linum perenne (perennial flax)<br />

Lotus angustissimus (slender bird's-foot-trefoil)<br />

Lotus subbiflorus (hairy bird's-foot-trefoil)<br />

Luronium natans (floating water-plantain)<br />

Lycopodiella inundata (marsh clubmoss)<br />

Lycopodium annotinum (interrupted clubmoss)<br />

Lysimachia thyrsiflora (tufted loosestrife)<br />

Marrubium vulgare (white horehound)<br />

Meconopsis cambrica (Welsh poppy)<br />

Medicago minima (bur medick)<br />

Medicago polymorpha (too<strong>the</strong>d medick)<br />

Medicago sativa ssp.falcata (sickle medick)<br />

Melampyrum sylvaticum (small cow-wheat)<br />

Melittis melissophyllum (bastard balm)<br />

Mentha suaveolens (round-leaved mint)<br />

Mertensia maritima (oysterplant)<br />

Mespilus germanica (medlar)<br />

Meum athamanticum (spignel)<br />

Minuartia hybrida (fine-leaved sandwort)<br />

Minuartia sedoides (cyphel)<br />

Minuartia verna (spring sandwort)<br />

Myosotis stolonifera (pale forget-me-not)<br />

Nqjasflexilis (slender naiad)<br />

Nuphar pumila (least water-lily)<br />

Nymphoides peltata (fringed water-lily)<br />

Odontites vernus ssp. litoralis' (red bartsia)<br />

Oenan<strong>the</strong> silaifolia (narrow-leaved water-dropwort)<br />

Ophioglossum azoricum (small adder's-tongue)<br />

Ophrys sphegodes (early spider-orchid)<br />

Orchis purpurea (lady orchid)<br />

Orchis ustulata (burnt orchid)<br />

Ornithogalum pyrenaicum (spiked star-<strong>of</strong>-Bethlehem)<br />

Orobanche alba (thyme broom rape)<br />

Orobanche rapum-genistae (greater broomrape)<br />

Parapholis incurva (curved hard-grass)<br />

Pedicularis sylvatica ssp. hibernica' (Iousewort)<br />

Persicaria mitis (tasteless water-pepper)<br />

Peucedanum ostruthium (masterwort)<br />

Peucedanum palustre (milk-parsley)<br />

Phleum alpinum (alpine cat's-tail)<br />

Phyteuma orbiculare (round-headed rampion)<br />

Pilularia globulifera (pillwort)<br />

Pinus sylvestris (scots pine)<br />

Conservation News & Views<br />

Poa alpina (alpine meadow-grass)<br />

Poa bulbosa (bulbous meadow-grass)<br />

Poa glauca (glaucous meadow-grass)<br />

Poa infirma (early meadow-grass)<br />

Polygonatum odoratum (angular Solomon's-seal)<br />

Polygonum boreale (nor<strong>the</strong>rn knotgrass)<br />

Polypogon monspeliensis (annual beard-grass)<br />

Potamogeton coloratus (fen pondweed)<br />

Potamogeton compressus (grass-wrack pondweed)<br />

Potamogetonfiliformis (slender-leaved pondweed)<br />

Potentilla crantzii (alpine cinquefoil)<br />

Potentilla neumanniana (spring cinquefoil)<br />

Primula elatior (oxlip)<br />

Primula farinosa (bird' s-eye primrose)<br />

Primula scotica (Scottish primrose)<br />

Puccinellia distans ssp. borealis (reflexed<br />

saltmarsh-grass)<br />

Puccinelliafasciculata (Borrer's saltmarsh-grass)<br />

Puccinellia rupestris (stiff saltmarsh-grass)<br />

Pulmonaria longifolia (narrow-leaved lungwort)<br />

Pulsatilla vulgaris (pasqueflower)<br />

Pyrola media (intermediate wintergreen)<br />

Pyrola rotundifolia ssp. maritima (round-leaved<br />

wintergreen)<br />

Pyrola rotundifolia ssp. rotundifolia (round-leaved<br />

wintergreen)<br />

Ranunculus flammula ssp. scoticus' (lesser spearwort)<br />

Ranunculus penicillatus ssp. penicillatus' (stream<br />

water-crowfoot)<br />

Rhynchosporafusca (brown beak-sedge)<br />

Ribes alpinum (mountain currant)<br />

Ribes spicatum (downy currant)<br />

Rorippa islandica (nor<strong>the</strong>rn yellow-cress)<br />

Rosa agrestis (small-leaved sweet-briar)<br />

Rumex crispus ssp. uliginosus' (curled dock)<br />

Rumex pseudoalpinus (monk's-rhubarb)<br />

Ruppia cirrhosa (spiral tasselweed)<br />

Sagina saginoides (alpine pearlwort)<br />

Salicorniafragilis' (yellow glasswort)<br />

Salicornia nitens' (shiny glasswort)<br />

Salicornia pusilla' (one-flowered glasswort)<br />

Salix arbuscula (mountain willow)<br />

Salix caprea ssp. sphacelata' (goat willow)<br />

Salix lapponum (downy willow)<br />

Salix myrsinites (whortle-Ieaved willow)<br />

Salix reticulata (net-leaved willow)<br />

Salvia pratensis (meadow c1ary)<br />

Sarcocornia perennis (perennial glasswort)<br />

Saxifraga nivalis (alpine saxifrage)<br />

Scilla autumnalis (autumn squill)<br />

Scleranthus annuus ssp. polycarpos' (annual knawel)<br />

Sedum forsterianum (rock stonecrop)<br />

Sedum villosum (hairy stonecrop)<br />

Sesleria caerulea (blue moor-grass)<br />

Sibbaldia procumbens (sibbaldia)<br />

Sibthorpia europaea (Cornish moneywort)<br />

Silene conica (sand catchfly)


45 Aliens<br />

ALIENS<br />

AKEBIA Qu/NATA (HOUTT.) DECNE. (LARDIZABALACEAE) NEW TO<br />

WEST KENT AND SPREADING?<br />

While Local Change recording in West Kent (v.c.l6; TQ46J) on 28 th September 2003, we noticed a<br />

woody climber on a railway bank. Recognising <strong>the</strong> plant as something exotic but not having much to<br />

go on, we took a specimen (Herb. JORlCCO). Eric Clement determined <strong>the</strong> plant as Akebia quinata<br />

(Chocolate Vine). This species is native to temperate regions <strong>of</strong> China, Korea and Japan and is grown<br />

as an ornamental for its unusual vanilla-scented, although short-lived, flowers.<br />

We found only one plant, trailing over scrub at <strong>the</strong> foot <strong>of</strong>a railway bank, SE <strong>of</strong>Chislehurst station<br />

(TQ434693). Associated species included Humulus lupulus (Hop) and Tamus communis (Black<br />

Bryony). There were no o<strong>the</strong>r obvious garden escapes in <strong>the</strong> immediate vicinity. The habitat was<br />

semi-shaded and damp, on a neutral, nutrient-enriched, compact substrate.<br />

We have identified five o<strong>the</strong>r records <strong>of</strong> A. quinata from <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. The earliest confirmed<br />

record was from an old railway bridge at Sandling, East Kent (v.c.l5), recorded in 1977 by John<br />

Palmer (Wild Flower Magazine 382: 23, cited in Clement & Foster 1994, although not mentioned in<br />

Philp 1982). There is mention <strong>of</strong> an earlier record from an unspecified locality in 1967, dismissed as<br />

'<strong>of</strong> transient worth only' by David McClintock (Wild Flower Magazine 352: 28). There are also<br />

records from Banstead Downs, Surrey in 1995, from 'Cuddington Way', Surrey in 1998 (probably <strong>the</strong><br />

same locality as <strong>the</strong> 1995 record) (Rodney Burton pers. comm.). and from Bookham Common, Surrey<br />

in 1998. At Bookham, a plant <strong>of</strong> Akebia quinata has escaped from an adjacent garden and 'has rooted<br />

copiously and is competing successfully with a bramble patch' (Radcliffe & Page 2003). However,<br />

<strong>the</strong>re has been no write-up or illustration for any <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se finds in <strong>BSBI</strong> News. There are no o<strong>the</strong>r Kent<br />

records (Eric Philp pers. comm.) and EJC is not aware <strong>of</strong> any o<strong>the</strong>r <strong>British</strong> records.<br />

The genus Akebia Decne. contains around five taxa, <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r frequent garden plants being A.<br />

trifoliata (Thunb.) Koidz. and <strong>the</strong> hybrid between this and A. quinata, A. x pentaphylla (Mack.) Mack.<br />

The RHS Plant Finder 2002-3 lists over 30 suppliers <strong>of</strong> A. quinata, <strong>the</strong>refore it is a relatively<br />

well-known garden plant. Its leaflets are 4-7cm long, ± obovate, usually in clusters <strong>of</strong> five, with<br />

distinctive retuse apices, cuneate bases and entire margins. There are excellent colour photographs in<br />

Phillips & Rix (2002) at p.74 and in Phillips & Rix (1989) at p.86. A full botanical description can be<br />

found in <strong>the</strong> European Garden Flora at pp.397-398. The sausage-shaped blue-purple pulpy fruits are<br />

edible but insipid (Mabberley 2002) although it rarely sets fruit in this country (Phillips & Rix 2002).<br />

A. quinata is 'common' naturalised in eastern North America (PhiIlips & Rix 2002) and, significantly,<br />

it is referred on <strong>the</strong> University <strong>of</strong> Connecticut botanic garden web site with <strong>the</strong> warning 'do not let this<br />

plant out <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> greenhouse; it is potentially highly invasive'. A. quinata has become a serious<br />

problem in several eastern states, primarily spreading by vegetative means, aided by humans. 'It<br />

grows so quickly that it can kill <strong>of</strong>f existing ground level vegetation, understory shrubs and trees, and<br />

even some canopy trees, by overtopping and smo<strong>the</strong>ring <strong>the</strong>m. Once established, its dense growth<br />

prevents seed germination and seedling establishment <strong>of</strong> native plants.' (Alien Plant Working Group<br />

1998). The plant at Bookham, ra<strong>the</strong>r ominously, has already started to climb a birch tree (Radcliffe &<br />

Page 2003)<br />

It will be interesting to see if this is just a casual record or whe<strong>the</strong>r this 'garden romper' (to quote<br />

EJC) can be found established elsewhere, especially if recent exceptionally warm summers continue.<br />

References:<br />

ALIEN PLANT WORKING GROUP. 1998. Fact sheet on A. quinata at: http://www.nps.gov/plants/alienlfact/<br />

akqul.htm The Plant Conservation Alliance, Washington, U.S.A.<br />

CLEMENT, EJ. & FOSTER, M.C. 1994. Alien Plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> BSB!, London<br />

MABBERLEY, DJ. 2002. The Plant-Book C.U.P., Cambridge


Aliens 47<br />

1cm<br />

1cm<br />

E G<br />

I<br />

Pratia pedunculata (R.Br.) Benth. del. H. Salzen © 2003


48 Aliens<br />

DISTINGUISHING LON/CERA N/T/DA AND L P/LEATA<br />

In my experience it is straightforward to distinguish Lonicera nitida and L. pi/eata in <strong>the</strong> field (c.j Eric<br />

Clement's article in <strong>BSBI</strong> News 94: 34). The leaves <strong>of</strong> L. nitida are much smaller and spread almost at<br />

right angles to <strong>the</strong> stem, while <strong>the</strong> bigger leaves <strong>of</strong> L. pi/eata are angled forwards at about 45° degrees<br />

to <strong>the</strong> stem (see photo below). The leaf vein character mentioned in Flora Europaea is OK but ra<strong>the</strong>r<br />

unnecessary; <strong>the</strong> point is that <strong>the</strong> central vein stands proud <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> upper leaf surface in L. pi/eata, but is<br />

flush with <strong>the</strong> leaf surface, and relatively indistinct in L. nitida. Close attention to stem hairiness will<br />

clinch it (see below). The plants that I have measured show a smaller range <strong>of</strong> leaf sizes than <strong>the</strong><br />

measurements given by Stace (6-16mm and 12-32mm respectively).<br />

Character Lonicera nitida Lonicera pileata<br />

Leaflength inc!. petiole l2-l4mm 20-26mm<br />

Leaf angle to stem c.90' c.45'<br />

Upper mid vein <strong>of</strong> leaf flush, indistinct raised, distinct<br />

Leaf shape pointed egg-shaped more narrowly elliptic<br />

Stem hairs pale, distinctly <strong>of</strong> 2 lengths, <strong>the</strong> brown, all more or less <strong>the</strong> same<br />

denser, short hairs patent length, most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>m bent forward<br />

towards <strong>the</strong> shoot tip<br />

Non-flowering shoots <strong>of</strong> Lonicera pi/eata (far left: under-surface; left: upper-surface) and Lonicera<br />

nitida (right: upper-surface; far right under-surface).<br />

MICK J. CRAWLEY, Imperial College, Silwood Park, Ascot, SL5 7PY<br />

ECH/NOCHLOA CRUS-GALL! AND MAJOR ROADS<br />

To add ano<strong>the</strong>r plant to <strong>the</strong> group associated with (?salted) major roads, has anyone else encountered<br />

<strong>the</strong> alien grass Echinochloa crus-galli (Cockspur) in such places? I first noticed it on 2 nd September<br />

200 I while driving along <strong>the</strong> M26 east <strong>of</strong> Maidstone. A little respect for <strong>the</strong> law and a great deal <strong>of</strong> it<br />

for <strong>the</strong> union <strong>of</strong> body and soul prevented me from obtaining a specimen for critical identification, so I<br />

noted it and apart from thinking it was unusual took it no fur<strong>the</strong>r. On <strong>the</strong> 8 th September 2002 I was<br />

driving along <strong>the</strong> A3 south <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Hog's Back, near Guildford and again noticed strips <strong>of</strong> E. c-g along<br />

<strong>the</strong> central reservation. The law was permissive and <strong>the</strong> road was quieter so I was able to obtain a<br />

sample for determination. Again, on <strong>the</strong> 8 th August 2003 I passed swa<strong>the</strong>s <strong>of</strong> a grass which appeared<br />

to be E. c-g along <strong>the</strong> middle <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> M5 not too far north <strong>of</strong> Exeter. These plants also remained<br />

unsampled!


Aliens 49<br />

I had thought that perhaps <strong>the</strong>se were casual occurrences (maybe as a result <strong>of</strong> a series <strong>of</strong> accidents<br />

involving convoys <strong>of</strong> lorries carrying bird seed) but <strong>the</strong> A3 colony was present again and thriving on<br />

<strong>the</strong> 9 th October 2003. I would be interested to hear if similar colonies exist elsewhere in <strong>the</strong> country.<br />

Echinochloa crus-galli is occasionally naturalised in cultivated ground, as stated in Stace's New Flora<br />

and as observed in maize fields near Pyrford, where cultivation buries <strong>the</strong> seeds, conferring frost<br />

protection, but that situation is not comparable with motorways. One could speculate that <strong>the</strong> species<br />

is salt-tolerant and that motorway salinity protects it from freezing, but at present it is just speculation.<br />

Incidentally, in <strong>the</strong> colonies I have seen <strong>the</strong> plants seem to be confined entirely to <strong>the</strong> central<br />

reservation, although I may be mistaken as it is not easy to botanise thoroughly both sides <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> road<br />

at motorway speeds, especially from <strong>the</strong> driving seat.<br />

GEORGE HOUNSOME, 14 St John's Rise, Woking, Surrey GU21 IPW; email:george.hounsome@lineone.net<br />

IS SALVIA SCLAREA DECLINING?<br />

Salvia sclarea L. (Clary) has long been cultivated in England as an ornamental and medicinal herb, but<br />

very much less frequently <strong>the</strong>se days. I have never seen it in gardens in Gosport, so it was a surprise<br />

hearing that Debbie Allan had found one plant <strong>of</strong> it at Hardway (S. Hants) in 2003. The large wrinkly<br />

leaves in a rosette (somewhat Hollyhock-like) had caught her attention on 14 June, and by 27 July<br />

flowers and fruits were present. It emitted a fruity fragrance detectable from a few feet away, and grew<br />

beside a rural pathway, but close to gardens. No records appear in The Flora <strong>of</strong> Hampshire (1996) -<br />

although IF. Rayner had found it 'abundant' at Hamble Common in 1924.<br />

Stace's New Flora (ed. 2, 1997, p.578) gives a good description, but provides no figure. Our<br />

splendid cover illustration by Gaham Easy (GMSE) was completed back in 1977, but due to an<br />

oversight, was never published. It was drawn from a plant at Thriplow tip (Cambs) found in July<br />

1974, and it was also at Milton gravel pits during infilling in June 1976. More surprising was GMSE's<br />

record in June 1998 <strong>of</strong> it as a crop on <strong>the</strong> experimental farm at Mepal.<br />

No o<strong>the</strong>r recent records exist in my card index. Is it still well established on old walls, as recorded,<br />

e.g., at Cliveden (1958), Wateringbury (1978), Sissinghurst Castle (1978) and Oxford (pre-1983)? The<br />

CD-Rom <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> New Atlas (2002) tells us <strong>of</strong> just seven records during 1987-1999 and thirteen earlier<br />

ones, dating from 1918. Much earlier records do exist; it was certainly at Arniston, Dalkeith<br />

(Midlothian) in c.1840 - see BEC Report 4: 426 (1917).<br />

There was an early reluctance to record garden escapes, especially <strong>of</strong> attractive ones, and that still<br />

persists today.<br />

ERIC J. CLEMENT, 54 Anglesey Road, Gosport, Hants P012 2EQ<br />

EUONYMUS JAPONICUS - HOW FAST IS IT INCREASING?<br />

Euonymus japonicus L.f. (Evergreen Spindle) is one <strong>of</strong> several shrubs vaguely known to <strong>the</strong> public<br />

(and even some botanists!) as 'privet' or even 'laurel', a generic term for similar dense shrubs with<br />

evergreen leaves. <strong>British</strong> Floras, even up to 1987, simply regarded this species as 'much planted near<br />

<strong>the</strong> sea' and did not even put it into <strong>the</strong>ir index (Clapham et al., 1987). Yet, Dr D.P. Young regarded it<br />

as 'naturalised in large quantity' in plantations above <strong>the</strong> sea-cliffs at Durlstone, Swanage, v.c. 9, June<br />

1960, BM.<br />

Our current, weighty New Atlas (2002) gives a surprising 187 records mostly sited near our<br />

coastline. This plant thrives on sea air and thus makes a useful windbreak or hedge. It spreads easily<br />

by layering, and can readily root from any broken or cut stems, e.g. hedge trimmings.<br />

It <strong>of</strong>ten sets abundant fruits, but bird-sown seedlings are unusual. J.R. Palmer has found <strong>the</strong>m in<br />

Kent, at Stone Halt station (1973), Darenth Wood (1973) and Greenhi<strong>the</strong> (1975), and on a wall at<br />

Trevarrack (1981) in W. Cornwall. In <strong>the</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> <strong>of</strong> Scilly 'it does not set seed every year and seedlings<br />

are rare (pers. comm. Clare Harvey, 1978). I have failed to find one anywhere for myself!


50<br />

A ,J I--------< cm<br />

C - I , K - N f---i mm<br />

Euonymusjaponicus L. fil. del. D.P.J. Smith © 2001<br />

Aliens<br />

·E


52 Aliens<br />

PHEDIMUS STOLONIFERUS (SEDUM STOLONIFERUM) NATURALISED IN<br />

SCOTLAND<br />

I recently made <strong>the</strong> exciting discovery <strong>of</strong> a thriving colony <strong>of</strong> Phedimus stoloniferus (Sedum stoloniferum<br />

(Lesser Caucasian-stonecrop)) naturalised in Scotland. I am reasonably confident <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> plant's<br />

identity, as specimens key out unequivocally as this species in Stace (1997). I first discovered <strong>the</strong><br />

colony in 2000 but returned to collect material this year when I noticed that according to <strong>the</strong> New Atlas<br />

this species is not recorded at all from Scotland.<br />

I now have pressed material and a photo <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flowers, and if anyone would like to see <strong>the</strong>se to<br />

check <strong>the</strong> identity, please contact me. The site is a damp, south-facing rock face toge<strong>the</strong>r with some<br />

loose gravelly substrate below it, in an enclosed miniature Glen below a waterfall in <strong>the</strong> River Devon,<br />

which carves a steep sided shady gorge through <strong>the</strong> lowlands immediately south <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ochil hills.<br />

The grid reference is NT004988, at <strong>the</strong> extreme edge <strong>of</strong> v.c. 87, near Dollar, between Perth and<br />

Stirling. The rock face <strong>the</strong> plants grow on and below is quite high (50m) and might be directly below<br />

a garden or former garden. There is also some sort <strong>of</strong> pumping station beside <strong>the</strong> site, standing on<br />

ground that may have been artificially constructed to house it. Thus <strong>the</strong> source <strong>of</strong> introduction could<br />

be gravel brought in to build up this base, or from <strong>the</strong> garden above. I would guess <strong>the</strong> plants have<br />

been present for a decade at least. There are twenty separate patches and it looks very at home. The<br />

only o<strong>the</strong>r vaguely unusual alien in <strong>the</strong> vicinity is a small patch <strong>of</strong> Saxifraga x urbium (s. umbrosa x<br />

S. spathularis) (Londonpride) on <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r side <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> river.<br />

I'd be interested to know if this species has been recorded from Scotland since <strong>the</strong> New Atlas was<br />

produced, or if mine is indeed <strong>the</strong> first Scottish record. [Yes as far as we can tell- Ed. SSN]<br />

DR RICHARD MILNE<br />

SEDUM BREVIFOLlUM - ANOTHER ESCAPE IN SCOTLAND<br />

In August we took our extended family to Scotland for a caravan holiday. Strangely <strong>the</strong> part <strong>of</strong><br />

Scotland we visited is fur<strong>the</strong>r south than where we live in England. The Mull <strong>of</strong> Galloway is almost as<br />

far south as Durham City, 50km south <strong>of</strong> our home in Northumberland.<br />

Having been born and bred near <strong>the</strong> foreshore, seaside holidays hold no fascination for me, so as<br />

<strong>the</strong> children busied <strong>the</strong>mselves looking for shells or crabs and building sandcastles, I took <strong>the</strong><br />

opportunity to explore Rockcliffe for Sedum anglicum (English Stonecrop) a plant which is not<br />

particularly hardy for me back home. This plant is commonly found on <strong>the</strong> Dumfries and Galloway,<br />

and Cumbrian coastlines.<br />

Joyce my wife pointed to a granite outcrop and said 'I bet it grows <strong>the</strong>re'. She's becoming too<br />

clever! I have only ever spotted this species in highly acid places and here it was growing in<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>usion. Green plants in shade were a real contrast to those in full sun. Record temperatures for<br />

this English summer made most plants a deep wine colour. But alongside it was ano<strong>the</strong>r acid-loving<br />

species - an alien!<br />

Of course I have found <strong>the</strong>se species frequent bedfellows in alpine Portugal on granite tors.<br />

Though I never did expect to see Sedum brevifolium growing (as it) wild in <strong>the</strong> UK.<br />

RAy STEPHENSON<br />

TRIFOLIUM STELLATUM IN HAMPSHIRE<br />

In May 1998, Mervyn Southam and I came across some Trifolium stellatum (Starry Clover) growing at<br />

Browndown, Gosport (South Hants, v.c. 11). I thought this merited a belated mention in <strong>BSBI</strong> News,<br />

particularly in view <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> opportunity <strong>of</strong> publishing some colour photographs <strong>of</strong> this striking plant<br />

(see colour section plate 2) but also to raise <strong>the</strong> possibility that <strong>the</strong> species may be native in <strong>the</strong> UK.


Aliens 53<br />

What is now an established colony, occurs as two patches, about ISm apart, on a south-facing,<br />

moderately steep, consolidated bank <strong>of</strong> gravel and shingle, next to <strong>the</strong> sea. At <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

discovery, each <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se patches held fewer than 10 flowering plants, but by July 1998 many more<br />

plants had developed. In early July 2002 several hundred were present covering a combined area <strong>of</strong><br />

more than five square metres, but in June 2003, only small numbers occurred, perhaps because dry<br />

wea<strong>the</strong>r had reduced germination and growth.<br />

Known also as Star Clover, Trifolium stellatum is an annual plant found throughout <strong>the</strong><br />

Mediterranean in a range <strong>of</strong> dry, sandy or stony habitats including roadsides and waste ground (Flora<br />

Europaea & o<strong>the</strong>r sources). It is clearly a plant <strong>of</strong> warm, dry conditions and infertile soils. At<br />

Browndown, <strong>the</strong> parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bank on which it occurs remain sparsely vegetated, <strong>the</strong> clover tending to<br />

dominate <strong>the</strong> particular areas over which it grows. The same bank, however, also supports a range <strong>of</strong><br />

small herbs and annual grasses, including Lotus corniculatus (Bird's-foot-trefoil), Plantago coronopus<br />

(Buck's-horn Plantain) and several o<strong>the</strong>r Trifolium species.<br />

The Browndown colony is <strong>the</strong> second established in <strong>the</strong> UK; <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r being at Shoreham,<br />

W. Sussex, where <strong>the</strong> species has remained for nearly 200 years since its discovery in 1804. The plant<br />

grows in a similar habitat <strong>the</strong>re, on <strong>the</strong> shingle beach, where it is believed to have originated from <strong>the</strong><br />

ballast <strong>of</strong> ships returning from <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean (Coulcher 2001, <strong>British</strong> Marine Life Study <strong>Society</strong><br />

website).<br />

The Browndown colony is unlikely to have originated from a deliberate introduction, garden<br />

escape or casual occurrence. Eric Clement (pers. comm.) told me he has never seen it in cultivation in<br />

<strong>the</strong> UK, though I did find it listed in one seed catalogue during a brief search <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> internet.<br />

According to <strong>the</strong> data presented in <strong>the</strong> New Atlas (Preston et al. 2002), Trifolium stellatum is<br />

effectively extinct as a casual, wool alien in <strong>the</strong> UK. Most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> records were made prior to <strong>the</strong><br />

1930s.<br />

At <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Browndown discovery <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>n v.c. Recorder, <strong>the</strong> late Paul Bowman,<br />

commented (in Wt.) that a garden escape was unlikely and that 'perhaps <strong>the</strong> seeds had been brought in<br />

on imported gravel, shingle or on military training vehicles'. The last <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se is a distinct possibility,<br />

since Browndown houses an army training camp. However, this <strong>the</strong>ory can probably be discounted<br />

because <strong>the</strong> area where vehicles are used is at least 1 km to <strong>the</strong> south-east <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> colony and prevailing<br />

south-westerly winds would tend to blow seeds in <strong>the</strong> wrong direction. In fact, <strong>the</strong> colony occurs at<br />

<strong>the</strong> very western end <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> Browndown site, and one would expect that <strong>the</strong> reverse should be true, i.e.,<br />

seeds should be blown from <strong>the</strong> existing colony and <strong>the</strong> species should spread to o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> site.<br />

Despite regular searching, however, it has not been found anywhere else over <strong>the</strong> area, even though<br />

large expanses <strong>of</strong> consolidated shingle occur.<br />

Paul Stanley (pers. comm.) has commented that <strong>the</strong> species may well be native at both Shoreham<br />

and Browndown. He has pointed out that <strong>the</strong> fact that <strong>the</strong> Browndown colony has not spread is a<br />

behaviour more characteristic <strong>of</strong> native species ra<strong>the</strong>r than <strong>of</strong> aliens. He thinks it is possible that <strong>the</strong><br />

plant has originated from long-buried seed and mentioned that he has been finding Trifolium<br />

glomeratum (Clustered Clover) on <strong>the</strong> Isle <strong>of</strong> Wight in sites where it had not been seen for 100 or 150<br />

years. This is interesting, because T glomeratum was found by myself and Debbie Allan lkm east <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> T stellatum site in June 2000, and in May 2002, it also appeared up at <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> same bank<br />

where <strong>the</strong> T stellatum grows. T glomeratum was previously reported for <strong>the</strong> Gosport coast by<br />

Townsend (1904), so it is at least 100 years since it has been recorded.<br />

There is a possibility that <strong>the</strong> bank on which <strong>the</strong> Trifolium stellatum occurs had been disturbed in<br />

some way prior to 1998, which would lend support to <strong>the</strong> buried seed <strong>the</strong>ory. Immediately to <strong>the</strong> east,<br />

<strong>the</strong> bank is covered with Gorse (Ulex europaeus) (see colour section plate 2), so perhaps some <strong>of</strong> this<br />

Gorse, along with a layer <strong>of</strong> shingle, had been removed from <strong>the</strong> bank prior to <strong>the</strong> appearance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

clover. Debbie Allan (pers. comm.) informs me that a nearby shingle butt was removed at about <strong>the</strong><br />

same time as <strong>the</strong> discovery, so perhaps equipment or vehicles used for this operation also resulted in<br />

disturbance or reshaping <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bank on which <strong>the</strong> Trifolium appeared.<br />

I am a little sceptical, however, that Trifolium stellatum could ever have escaped notice by<br />

Townsend and o<strong>the</strong>r Hampshire botanists if it had occurred at Browndown in <strong>the</strong> past. My belief is


54 Aliens<br />

that it arrived by natural means, ei<strong>the</strong>r by wind, waves (7) or perhaps by seed-eating birds. Since it is<br />

virtually unknown in <strong>the</strong> UK, <strong>the</strong>re must be a strong possibility that seeds came from <strong>the</strong> Shoreham<br />

colony. The two sites are separated by 50 miles (80km) <strong>of</strong> coastline and about <strong>the</strong> same distance by<br />

road.<br />

Human transferral from Shoreham or fur<strong>the</strong>r afield must also be considered, but I think this is<br />

unlikely. The fact, as mentioned above, that <strong>the</strong> Browndown plants have not spread to o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> site is remarkable, considering that <strong>the</strong> area is open access and extremely popular with dog<br />

walkers. If <strong>the</strong> seeds or fruits were carried around on people's shoes or <strong>the</strong> feet <strong>of</strong> dogs, it would be<br />

appearing in o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> site by now and I <strong>the</strong>refore believe that <strong>the</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> accidental<br />

human introduction from Shoreham is very remote.<br />

I cannot really make an informed judgement on whe<strong>the</strong>r Trifolium stellatum is native in Britain<br />

until I investigate <strong>the</strong> history and ecology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Shoreham colony, which I have not yet visited, in<br />

more detail. However, I think <strong>the</strong> possibility should certainly be considered. I would be interested in<br />

o<strong>the</strong>r people's opinions on this or for any fur<strong>the</strong>r information.<br />

It should be mentioned that a number <strong>of</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r Mediterranean species do occur along <strong>the</strong> south<br />

coast, including some presumed native and some not. Fur<strong>the</strong>rmore, several are currently on <strong>the</strong><br />

increase, probably due to <strong>the</strong> recent series <strong>of</strong> mild winters and warm summers. Mediterranean species<br />

that have recently spread across south Hampshire include Poa inflrma (Early Meadow-grass),<br />

Hirschfeldia incana (Hoary Mustard), Erodium moschatum (Musk Stork's-bill), Polypogon viridis<br />

(Water Bent) and Gaudiniafragilis (French Oat-grass). Gaudinia occurs on <strong>the</strong> beach only lOOm or<br />

so W <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> T. stellatum colony (a single plant found in 2002 by Eric Clement and Debbie Allan and<br />

still present in 2003).<br />

One o<strong>the</strong>r Mediterranean species worth mentioning is Centaurea calcitrapa (Red Star-thistle).<br />

This has declined on <strong>the</strong> south coast where it is 'probably native' (Wiggington 1999, Preston et al.<br />

2002). Browndown is <strong>the</strong> site <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> last known record in Hampshire for this species in 1984.<br />

However, this was only a single plant. In fact, <strong>the</strong> species died out from established sites in <strong>the</strong> county<br />

in <strong>the</strong> 1930s (Brewis et al. 1996). This is a species that could start increasing again.<br />

References:<br />

BREWIS, A, BOWMAN, P. & ROSE, F. 1996. The Flora o/Hampshire. Harley Books, Colchester.<br />

BRITISH MARINE LIFE STUDY SOCIETY website: http://ourworld.compuserve.comlhomepages/BMLSS/starry.htm<br />

COULCHER, P. 2001. Unto <strong>the</strong> hills: <strong>the</strong> history and wildlife o/<strong>the</strong> South Downs. Book Guild.<br />

PRESTON, C.D., PEARMAN, D.A & DINES, T.D. eds. 2002. New Atlas o/<strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irishflora. Oxford<br />

University Press.<br />

TOWNSEND, F. 1904. Flora 0/ Hampshire, including <strong>the</strong> Isle 0/ Wight. 2 nd edn. Lovell Reeve and Co.,<br />

London.<br />

WIGGINGTON, M.I. ed. 1999. <strong>British</strong> Red Data Books, 1 vascular plants. 3,d edn. JNCC, Peterborough.<br />

JOHN A. NORTON, 215 Forton Road, Gosport, P0l2 3HB; email: john-norton@ntlworld.com<br />

A HYBRID MALLOW WITH GARDEN POTENTIAL<br />

A hybrid between Malva moschata and M alcea received a brief mention in Clement and Foster<br />

(1994.) It is possible that this was based on <strong>the</strong> note by Grabam Easy in <strong>BSBI</strong> News 23 (1979) in<br />

which he expressed surprise over atypical characters <strong>of</strong> herbarium specimens, with <strong>the</strong> implication <strong>of</strong><br />

hybrid origin.<br />

For many years I have grown Malva alcea (Greater Musk-mallow) and <strong>the</strong> white form (alba) <strong>of</strong><br />

Malva moschata (Musk Mallow) in my garden. No hybrids occurred. In 1999 I added <strong>the</strong> wild pink<br />

form (M moschata moschata) to my stock.<br />

I must confess to being a ra<strong>the</strong>r untidy gardener, tending to leave self-sown garden subjects where<br />

<strong>the</strong>y germinate, provided <strong>the</strong>ir position is not unduly inconvenient. Such a plant (at first uncritically<br />

assumed to be Malva alcea) began to appear somewhat unusual in <strong>the</strong> second half <strong>of</strong> 2002. It grew<br />

much taller than usual, reaching a height <strong>of</strong> 1.6m by midsummer. The fastigiate form <strong>of</strong> M alcea is


Aliens 55<br />

usually less than 1.2m, while M mosehata scarcely reaches O.Sm. Flowering commenced in late June<br />

and continued until <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> December! Not a single seed was produced from <strong>the</strong> many hundreds <strong>of</strong><br />

blooms, although <strong>the</strong>re had been ample opportunity <strong>of</strong> fertilisation from plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> two species in<br />

<strong>the</strong> garden.<br />

The combination <strong>of</strong> very long flowering period and total absence <strong>of</strong> seed led me to conclude that<br />

this must be a hybrid, and fur<strong>the</strong>r that M mosehata mosehafa was one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> parents. The flowering<br />

periods <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> two species are largely different but <strong>the</strong>re is sufficient overlap to provide <strong>the</strong> opportunity<br />

for crossing. In Sussex Malva mosehata begins flowering in <strong>the</strong> last week <strong>of</strong> May and ceases in <strong>the</strong><br />

second week <strong>of</strong> July. M aleea starts in <strong>the</strong> first week <strong>of</strong> July and goes on until <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> August. The<br />

flowers <strong>of</strong> all three taxa are virtually identical in colour and size, but whereas Malva mosehata and <strong>the</strong><br />

hybrid present a flat face, those <strong>of</strong> M aleea present a somewhat bowl-shaped outline. All three close<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir flowers at night. Flowers <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hybrid appear singly from an umbel-like cluster, and in<br />

succession. Shortly after fading <strong>the</strong> petals fall as a unit. Some time later <strong>the</strong> capitulum including<br />

calyx and epicalyx drops <strong>of</strong>f also, leaving a tiny umbel <strong>of</strong> pedicels on <strong>the</strong> plant.<br />

A reliable method <strong>of</strong> distinguishing between <strong>the</strong> taxa is by <strong>the</strong> leaves (see below). Primary and<br />

basal leaves if present should be discounted because <strong>the</strong>y are prone to great variation in shape and size.<br />

The lower stem leaves <strong>of</strong> Malva aleea are shallowly lobed, and <strong>the</strong> degree <strong>of</strong> lobing increases only<br />

gradually up <strong>the</strong> stem, reaching completion only near <strong>the</strong> apex. On <strong>the</strong> stems <strong>of</strong> both M mosehata and<br />

<strong>the</strong> hybrid <strong>the</strong>re is an immediate transfonnation to fully dissected lobing <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> leaves over <strong>the</strong> whole<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> stem. The latter species and hybrid can be differentiated by <strong>the</strong> fact that all leaves <strong>of</strong><br />

M mosehata have an additional pair <strong>of</strong> subsidiary lobes, nowhere present in <strong>the</strong> hybrid. They are<br />

noticeably smaller than <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lamina, and are directed backwards (i.e, in a direction<br />

opposite to <strong>the</strong> main trend <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> leaf). They are frequently not coplanar with <strong>the</strong> lamina.<br />

Middle<br />

Stem<br />

Leaves<br />

Lower<br />

Stem<br />

.Leaves<br />

Ma/va aleea<br />

50 mm<br />

I [ I !<br />

Maivu lIIosehata Hybrid<br />

Some minor degree <strong>of</strong> instability <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hybrid is suggested by <strong>the</strong> appearance, late in <strong>the</strong> season, <strong>of</strong><br />

a single shaIlowly lobed leaf in <strong>the</strong> upper part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> plant, similar to that <strong>of</strong> Malva aleea. The<br />

remainder <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> leaves, whe<strong>the</strong>r in dozens or hundreds are all typical <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hybrid. This has been<br />

observed on five <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> eight hybrids present.


56 Aliens<br />

It seems probable that <strong>the</strong> first hybrid plant germinated in 2001; four more in 2002, followed by<br />

three in 2003. It is not known whe<strong>the</strong>r this resulted from a single hybridisation event, with<br />

intermittent germination over three years, or several events. In <strong>the</strong> first year, although producing a few<br />

flowers <strong>the</strong> plant does not manage a height <strong>of</strong> more than 0.7m. It achieves its full glory in two years,<br />

producing stems to 1.6m and hundreds <strong>of</strong> flowers over a long period (see colour section, plate 2). The<br />

length <strong>of</strong> its life is <strong>of</strong> course at present unknown, but <strong>the</strong> fact <strong>of</strong> its total sterility points to <strong>the</strong><br />

probability <strong>of</strong> a long life.<br />

The taxa differ also in <strong>the</strong> three-lobed epicalyx <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> flower. In Malva alcea <strong>the</strong> epicalyx lobes<br />

are broadly ovate and as long as <strong>the</strong> calyx lobes. In M moschata <strong>the</strong> epicalyx lobes are<br />

linear-lanceolate (i.e. grass-like) and much shorter than <strong>the</strong> calyx lobes. The epicalyx <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hybrid is<br />

intermediate, with narrow-ovate lobes slightly shorter than those <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> calyx.<br />

In April 2003 <strong>the</strong> hybrid originally found was dug out, firstly to separate it from a small rose with<br />

which it was intimately growing, and secondly to obtain material for propagation. It was assumed that<br />

removing a 30cm cube <strong>of</strong> soil would be adequate to extract both plants successfully. It was a great<br />

surprise to find <strong>the</strong>refore that <strong>the</strong> hybrid had formed a large tap root, and this had broken during<br />

extraction, leaving a substantial portion still in <strong>the</strong> soil. In shape, size and texture <strong>the</strong> tap root<br />

resembled a large parsnip, but with several thick secondary roots radiating horizontally from <strong>the</strong> axis.<br />

Two <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>se rose to ground level and appeared to have taken on <strong>the</strong> character <strong>of</strong> rhizomes. Basal<br />

cuttings, root cuttings and 'rhizome' cuttings were taken to attempt propagation. Ano<strong>the</strong>r tall hybrid<br />

plant has appeared at <strong>the</strong> site, though whe<strong>the</strong>r this is re-growth from <strong>the</strong> residual tap root or from a<br />

'rhizome' is not known.<br />

Of <strong>the</strong> cuttings, no success was obtained from root or 'rhizome' cuttings. All <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> basal cuttings<br />

prospered however, as did side stem cuttings later from o<strong>the</strong>r plants, despite initial defoliation<br />

following snail attack.<br />

It has not yet been established which species is <strong>the</strong> female parent <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hybrid and until this is<br />

known <strong>the</strong> appropriate sequence <strong>of</strong> specific epi<strong>the</strong>ts cannot be applied to name <strong>the</strong> hybrid. Samples <strong>of</strong><br />

seed set during <strong>the</strong> flowering overlap period have been sown in <strong>the</strong> hope <strong>of</strong> eliciting an answer.<br />

However, owing to <strong>the</strong> inability to segregate plants in <strong>the</strong> garden <strong>the</strong> chance <strong>of</strong> success in this first trial<br />

is slight.<br />

Having observed <strong>the</strong> behaviour <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hybrid for two seasons it seems apparent that <strong>the</strong> period <strong>of</strong><br />

flowering is likely to be variable, perhaps due to atmospheric conditions and/or degree <strong>of</strong> exposure to<br />

sunlight. The first tall plant, in 2002 grew in a position exposed to full sun for about two hours in <strong>the</strong><br />

morning and three hours before sunset. For <strong>the</strong> remainder <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> day it was fully shaded by house or<br />

trees. 2002 was a year in which sunny days were plentiful, but <strong>the</strong>re was no long period without<br />

adequate rainfall. Flowering was continuous from late June until <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> December. Ano<strong>the</strong>r tall<br />

plant, in <strong>the</strong> same location in 2003, is still well in flower but appears likely to finish in early<br />

December. The o<strong>the</strong>r tall plant, in a position this year which receives full sun all day has flowered<br />

well, but has no more flower buds and will finish by <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> October. It is possibly significant that<br />

this year has seen record amounts <strong>of</strong> sunshine and prolonged periods <strong>of</strong> dry wea<strong>the</strong>r, verging on<br />

drought conditions in mid-Sussex.<br />

Key to distinguish <strong>the</strong> two species and hybrid<br />

Lower stem leaves with few shallow lobes, cut 1/3-1/2 way to stalk.<br />

Epicalyx lobes broad-ovate, equalling calyx lobes<br />

Lower stem leaves very deeply lobed, almost to stalk<br />

2 Lower stem leaves with 7 primary lobes (incl. 2 directed backwards)<br />

Epicalyx lobes linear lanceolate<br />

Lower stem leaves with 5 primary lobes<br />

Epicalyx lobes narrow-ovate<br />

Ma/va a/cea<br />

2<br />

Ma/va moschata<br />

hybrid


Aliens / Notices (<strong>BSBI</strong>) / Notices (Non-<strong>BSBI</strong>) 57<br />

Some gardeners may balk at <strong>the</strong> prospect <strong>of</strong> flowers at heights up to 1.6m but it must be pointed out<br />

that it would combine advantageously with shrubs <strong>of</strong> a similar height whose flowering would, at best,<br />

be confined to a few weeks. The hybrid would provide a very long period <strong>of</strong> colour, in favourable<br />

circumstances in excess <strong>of</strong> six months. The colour is not confined to <strong>the</strong> apex, because many side<br />

branches flower during <strong>the</strong> season. In its second year <strong>the</strong> plant achieves a diameter <strong>of</strong> about 0.7m. The<br />

foliage is mid-green and elegantly dissected. It seems inevitable that once <strong>the</strong> horticultural trade<br />

become aware <strong>of</strong> its potential it will appear in many garden centres.<br />

Re-examination <strong>of</strong> Graham Easy's note raises <strong>the</strong> possibility that <strong>the</strong> plant collected as long ago as<br />

1828 by Pr<strong>of</strong>essor J.S. Henslow (Darwin's mentor) was <strong>the</strong> hybrid, though unrecognised at <strong>the</strong> time.<br />

If lower stem leaves survive on <strong>the</strong> herbarium specimen it would be possible to confirm or refute this<br />

possibility<br />

References:<br />

CLEMENT, E.J. & FOSTER, M.C. 1994. Alien Plants <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>. <strong>BSBI</strong>.<br />

EAsy,G.M. 1979. Malva alcea & M moschata in Cambs. <strong>BSBI</strong> News: 23<br />

BRYAN RADCLlFFE 14, Manor Close, Burgess Hill, Sussex RH15 ONN<br />

NOTICES (<strong>BSBI</strong>)<br />

PICOS DE EUROPA<br />

There is one place left on <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> trip to <strong>the</strong> Picos de Europa, May 31 to June 9 2004. If you are<br />

interested, please contact Lynne Farrell at lynne.farrell@snh.gov.uk or phone 01738-444177 as soon<br />

as possible for fur<strong>the</strong>r information.<br />

NOTICES (NON-<strong>BSBI</strong>)<br />

FLORA LOCALE<br />

Native flora: local projects web pages and database<br />

Thanks to contributions from <strong>the</strong> Heritage Lottery Fund and Esmee Fairbairn Foundation, Flora locale<br />

has recently re-launched its website, which aims to provide a one-stop-shop source <strong>of</strong> information on<br />

using and sourcing native flora for projects that have planting with wildlife in mind.<br />

A new feature <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> website is an interactive map <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> UK, where you can find out about<br />

projects happening in regions throughout <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> and Ireland. Each case study will have brief<br />

information about <strong>the</strong> project, and a link to <strong>the</strong> project website if <strong>the</strong>re is one.<br />

Any organisation currently involved in a restoration project, where good practice in sourcing and<br />

using native flora is being observed, is invited to complete a pr<strong>of</strong>orma describing <strong>the</strong>ir project. General<br />

information about broader restoration initiatives across <strong>the</strong> UK may also be submitted. This<br />

information will also be used to compile a database about different projects, <strong>the</strong> types <strong>of</strong> plants or seed<br />

used and <strong>the</strong> habitats involved.<br />

The completeness <strong>of</strong> this information resource, which will be available free to anyone visiting <strong>the</strong><br />

website, is ultimately dependent on receiving information about projects. So, if you are involved with<br />

restoring a heathland using local seed, replanting Water Crowfoot in a chalk stream, harvesting<br />

meadow seed or creating new native woods through natural regeneration or local seed collections -<br />

please contact Flora locale now.<br />

The pr<strong>of</strong>orma is available from info@floralocale.org and <strong>the</strong> address <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> web site, which will be<br />

launched in January 2004 is www.floralocale.org<br />

SUE EVERETT, Projects Coordinator & Secretary, Flora locale


58 Notices (Non-<strong>BSBI</strong>)<br />

PLANT EVOLUTION IN MEDITERANEAN CLIMATE ZONES<br />

IX'h IOPB Meeting 2004<br />

16 - 19 May 2004<br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> Garden <strong>of</strong> Valencia University, Spain<br />

The International Organization <strong>of</strong> Plant Biosystematics (IOPB) will hold its IX'h Symposium in May<br />

2004 in Valencia, Spain, under <strong>the</strong> main Topic Plant Evolution in Mediterranean Climate Zones. The<br />

Symposium will consist <strong>of</strong> 10 organised scientific sessions each addressed by an invited speaker.<br />

Contributions are welcome ei<strong>the</strong>r as short oral communications or as posters. Two different post­<br />

Symposium excursions are also available.<br />

For more information please visit <strong>the</strong> Symposium website: www.jardibotanic.org/iopb.html<br />

PLANT IDENTIFICATION COURSES<br />

Rare Plants Group<br />

Ashmolean Natural History <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oxfordshire<br />

Again in 2004, <strong>the</strong> Rare Plants Group <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ashmolean Natural History <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong> Oxfordshire is<br />

running its plant identification courses. These very well-received courses teach <strong>the</strong> use <strong>of</strong> plant ID<br />

keys (mainly in Stace's New Flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>) entirely from scratch in a friendly and encouraging<br />

class with a very high tutor-student ratio. No-one gets left behind and we have enabled all our<br />

students to make progress whatever <strong>the</strong>ir ability or background.<br />

We start with easier-to-identifY families and deal with more difficult families as <strong>the</strong> year<br />

progresses. Students are expected to use hand lenses, binocular microscopes are available and we<br />

discuss current identification books.<br />

The course is split into six Saturday-morning indoor sessions from April to September but we will<br />

expect students to do some work in between sessions; <strong>the</strong>y will be able to bring difficulties to <strong>the</strong> next<br />

session. There is also an optional, free, field session.<br />

We also run advanced courses for our alumni or those with equivalent skills. This year we will be<br />

doing a two-session course on Willows and Poplars and a one-day field course on chalk grassland<br />

plants.<br />

For more details, including dates and costs, email frances.watkins@anthriscus.co.ukorring 01865<br />

863660.<br />

WILD FLOWERS AND THEIR IDENTIFICATION<br />

Perhaps you're one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> many people who find wild flowers beautiful and fascinating, but not easy to<br />

name. If you've made a first attempt at looking <strong>the</strong>m up in a field guide, you'll know that it's not<br />

straightforward. The pages seem to be full <strong>of</strong> similar-looking pictures, and unfamiliar words. Quite<br />

likely, you couldn't sort out <strong>the</strong> petioles from <strong>the</strong> pedicels from <strong>the</strong> peduncles, and you gave up in<br />

frustration.<br />

Sounds familiar? Then this short course is for you! You will learn some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> local flowers, <strong>of</strong><br />

course, but <strong>the</strong> emphasis will be on <strong>the</strong> general techniques <strong>of</strong> accurate identification, ra<strong>the</strong>r than trying<br />

to fill your head with too many species. The key skills are knowing how to look at <strong>the</strong> plant, and how<br />

to use <strong>the</strong> field guide properly. With <strong>the</strong>se fundamentals mastered, you will become confident in using<br />

a field guide on your own, and can look forward to <strong>the</strong> satisfaction <strong>of</strong> finding and identifYing new<br />

species.<br />

The Course will be run on three Wednesday evenings at Market Bosworth High School &<br />

Community College, Leicestershire, 19.30 - 21.30, between May and July 2004, each followed by a<br />

Saturday afternoon, 14.00 - 17.00 out in <strong>the</strong> field. Exact dates to be finalised by Christmas 2003.<br />

The Course tutor is Steve Woodward, an amateur botanist with 25 years experience who has<br />

contributed to local and national surveys. He has published a book about <strong>the</strong> plant ecology <strong>of</strong>


Notices (Non-<strong>BSBI</strong>) 59<br />

Swithland Wood and is an active member <strong>of</strong> <strong>Botanical</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> and a volunteer<br />

reserve manager for <strong>the</strong> local Wildlife Trust.<br />

For more information please contact:<br />

STEPHEN WOODWARD, 19 Highfield Road, Groby, Leicester LE6 OGU; tel.: (home), 0116 2871679<br />

email: grobysteve@aol.com<br />

TAXONOMISTS<br />

Your National Focal Point Needs You for Services to Biodiversity Conservation<br />

Taxonomic expertise is vital for biodiversity conservation. Species cannot be identified, monitoring is<br />

impossible, and conservation measures are doomed to failure without basic taxonomic information on<br />

insect, plant and animal species.<br />

The Global Taxonomy Initiative (GT!) has been set up under <strong>the</strong> Convention on Biological<br />

Diversity to ensure that this taxonomic expertise is maintained. This will enable <strong>the</strong> UK to conserve its<br />

own biodiversity and use its expertise and collections to help o<strong>the</strong>r countries conserve <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

biodiversity<br />

The Natural History Museum is <strong>the</strong> UK's National Focal Point for <strong>the</strong> GT! and is compiling a<br />

register <strong>of</strong> UK taxonomists. This register will serve as a repository <strong>of</strong> information on practising<br />

taxonomists in <strong>the</strong> UK and will be used to assess <strong>the</strong> UK's taxonomic capabilities, and match <strong>the</strong>se to<br />

<strong>the</strong> biodiversity conservation needs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> UK and o<strong>the</strong>r countries.<br />

IF YOU ARE A TAXONOMIST, WE NEED YOUl<br />

PLEASE CONTACT THE NATIONAL FOCAL POINT OFFICER, Alistair Taylor,<br />

SO THAT YOU CAN BE INCLUDED IN THE REGISTER<br />

biodiversity@nhm.ac.uk<br />

Tel: 02079425372<br />

Fax: 02079425841<br />

AUSTAIR TAYLOR, Biodiversity Liaison Officer, National Focal Point for <strong>the</strong> Global Taxonomy Initiative,<br />

Research and Consulting Office, Science Directorate, Natural History Museum, Cromwell<br />

Road, London SW7 5BD<br />

HEMIPARASITES SYMPOSIUM 15-16 APRIL 2004<br />

1st International symposium on <strong>the</strong> biology <strong>of</strong>hemiparasitic Scrophulariaceae?<br />

Wageningen, 15-16 April 2004<br />

Hemiparasitic Scrophulariaceae form a special group <strong>of</strong> plants. Many people study <strong>the</strong> weedy taxa<br />

(Striga, Orobanche) and regularly meet, but fewer scientists, sometimes in a fairly isolated position,<br />

work with <strong>the</strong>, <strong>of</strong>ten endangered, non-weedy genera. Therefore, it was decided to organise a workshop<br />

Ismall symposium, to meet and discuss <strong>the</strong> 'state <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> art', and define open questions with respect to<br />

<strong>the</strong> biology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> non-weedy hemiparasitic Scrophs.<br />

We hope that <strong>the</strong> attendance will include both settled scientists as well as starting PhD's, and<br />

anybody in between. This would <strong>of</strong>fer chances for a wide exchange <strong>of</strong> experiences and discussion <strong>of</strong><br />

problems, a,s well as transfer <strong>of</strong> information between generations. We are trying to keep costs as low<br />

as possible, and are searching for funds.<br />

The meeting will be held in Wageningen (The Ne<strong>the</strong>rlands), Thursday-Friday, 15-16 April 2004,<br />

just after Easter. We plan to have proceedings published as a special issue <strong>of</strong>a refereed journal.<br />

Full information can be found on <strong>the</strong> web: www.hemiparasites.nl


60 Notices (Non-<strong>BSBI</strong>)<br />

The organisers: Siny ter Borg (Wageningen University, NL); Renate Wesselingh (Universite catholique<br />

de Louvain, B); Manja Kwak (University <strong>of</strong> Groningen, NL); Jan van Groenendael (University<br />

<strong>of</strong>Nijmegen, NL); Juul Limpens (Wageningen University, NL); Jelle Ferwerda, (Bio-Vision,<br />

Enschede, NL) (webmaster); Ben Post, (Organisation BureauPost, Doorwerth, NL) (registration,<br />

finances etc.)<br />

INSECT-PLANT INTERACTIONS: FROM PARASITISM TO MUTUALISM<br />

9 March 2004 17.30<br />

Associations between insects and plants are remarkably diverse, ranging from antagonism to mutualism.<br />

This meeting aims to bring toge<strong>the</strong>r research on insect-plant interactions, with an emphasis on<br />

<strong>the</strong> importance <strong>of</strong> having robust phylogenies for both insects and plants to understand <strong>the</strong> patterns and<br />

processes that have generated <strong>the</strong> current diversity <strong>of</strong> plant-insect associations. The talks will take us<br />

on a tour <strong>of</strong> plant-insect interactions research, from highly co-evolved systems, such as <strong>the</strong> fascinating<br />

fig-fig wasp systems, to <strong>the</strong> highly specialized leaf-mining moths and gall wasps.<br />

Organised by Dr Carlos Lopez Vaamonde, Institute <strong>of</strong> Zoology, ZSL<br />

EXPLAINING SPECIES ABUNDANCE DISTRIBUTIONS: BIODIVERSITY<br />

OVERTIME<br />

8 June 200417.30<br />

The relative abundance <strong>of</strong> species in ecological assemblages is a topic that has intrigued biologists for<br />

decades. Why, for example, do communities contain many more rare than common species? This<br />

meeting reveals how a better understanding <strong>of</strong> changes in community composition and structure over<br />

time can help elucidate empirical patterns <strong>of</strong> abundance, improve methods <strong>of</strong> biodiversity and inform<br />

conservation policy.<br />

Organised by Pr<strong>of</strong>essor Anne Magurran, Gatty Marine Laboratory, University <strong>of</strong> St Andrews<br />

All lectures take place in <strong>the</strong> Meeting Rooms, The Zoological <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong> London, Regent's Park,<br />

London<br />

Admission to Scientific Meetings is FREE<br />

PETER FAY, Hon. Assistant Secretary, <strong>the</strong> Zoological <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong> London, Regent's Park, London<br />

NW14RY<br />

WORLD WETLANDS DAY CONFERENCE 2004<br />

Wetlands: Policy into Action<br />

2 nd & 3rd February, 2004<br />

School <strong>of</strong> Oriental & African Studies, RusselI Square, London<br />

World Wetlands Day (WWD) marks <strong>the</strong> signing <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Convention on Wetlands on 2 nd February 1971,<br />

in <strong>the</strong> Iranian city <strong>of</strong> Ramsar on <strong>the</strong> shores <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Caspian Sea. The Ramsar Convention was a maj or<br />

milestone in <strong>the</strong> recognition <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> importance <strong>of</strong> wetlands both to society and biodiversity. The<br />

challenges we face today are no less real than when <strong>the</strong> convention was signed in 1971. WWD was<br />

celebrated for <strong>the</strong> first time in 1997. Each year, government agencies, non-governmental<br />

organisations, and groups <strong>of</strong> citizens at all levels <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> community have taken advantage <strong>of</strong> WWD to<br />

undertake actions aimed at raising public awareness <strong>of</strong> wetland values and benefits in general and <strong>the</strong><br />

Ramsar Convention in particular. This will be <strong>the</strong> third WWD conference in <strong>the</strong> UK and is building<br />

on <strong>the</strong> experience we have developed so far.


Notices (Non-BSB!) I Requests 61<br />

Aims and Objectives <strong>of</strong> this conference<br />

The aim <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> conference is to bring toge<strong>the</strong>r all <strong>the</strong> key organisations in <strong>the</strong> UK involved in wetIands<br />

issues to share knowledge, discuss innovative techniques, network, consider good practice case studies<br />

and promote business and wetland biodiversity. During <strong>the</strong> WWD 2003 conference we canvassed<br />

delegates for ideas on what <strong>the</strong>y saw as <strong>the</strong> function <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> conference. Not surprisingly this resulted<br />

in a mix <strong>of</strong> differing objectives. We have worked <strong>the</strong>se into this year's programme with a view to<br />

helping structure <strong>the</strong> way we approach <strong>the</strong> conference and take forward important <strong>the</strong>mes. The objectives<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> WWD 2004 conference are to:<br />

Understand <strong>the</strong> state <strong>of</strong>wetIands in order to identify where progress needs to be made<br />

Explore how major policy initiatives and investment programmes should be developed to benefit<br />

wetland habitats<br />

Share plans on how <strong>the</strong> World WetIands Day could be broadened and developed to promote<br />

wetlands on a much larger scale than at present - we will be seeking you help in developing this<br />

programme<br />

Develop an understanding <strong>of</strong> how best practice can help resolve key issues in practice in order to<br />

help take forward key <strong>the</strong>mes such as partnership, <strong>the</strong> role <strong>of</strong> project <strong>of</strong>ficers etc.<br />

Promote <strong>the</strong> RSPB/CIWEM Living Wetlands Award and to promote <strong>the</strong> importance <strong>of</strong> an international<br />

view <strong>of</strong>wetlands<br />

Produce a CD <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> event in order to structure <strong>the</strong> way wetland issues from <strong>the</strong> event are communicated<br />

and put into practice, and developed with a sense <strong>of</strong> continuity.<br />

The meeting will be chaired by Dr Peter Spillett, Thames Water, Ge<strong>of</strong>f Bateman OBE, Environment<br />

Agency and Dr Chris Spray Northumbrian Water.<br />

Fur<strong>the</strong>r details from Bob Earll: Phone/Fax 01531 890415 Joining details - maps, directions and hotels<br />

- and programme are on <strong>the</strong> CMS website: www.coastms.co.uk or Email bob.earll@coastms.co.uk<br />

REQUESTS<br />

BOTANICAL ENGLISH EDITOR REQUIRED FOR WILLOWS OF THE<br />

URALS<br />

We have recently completed <strong>the</strong> text for a book on <strong>the</strong> Willows <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Urals, Russia, after five years <strong>of</strong><br />

study. The book includes an introduction, keys, descriptions <strong>of</strong> 35 species (many <strong>of</strong> which occur in<br />

Britain), one or two photographs <strong>of</strong> each species, illustrations, distribution maps and an index in Latin,<br />

Russian and English. It will be about 260 pages in total.<br />

The book is being translated into English by a non-botanist, but about 80 pages <strong>of</strong> text requires<br />

editing into proper botanical English (including <strong>the</strong> descriptions) for publication in June 2004. If<br />

anyone is able to help, would <strong>the</strong>y please contact me at <strong>the</strong> address below. We may be able to provide<br />

some limited funding.<br />

SVIATLANA TRYBUSH, Rothamsted Research, Harpenden, Hertfordshire AL5 2JQ; Tel.: 01582-763133<br />

ext. 2191. Email: sviatIana.trybush@bbsrc.ac.uk<br />

PHOTOGRAPHS OF BRITISH PLANTS<br />

Hopefully, many <strong>of</strong> you will have seen my website devoted to <strong>the</strong> identification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> flora.<br />

You can find it at www.reticule.co.uk. It has proved popular and it receives well over 1500 visits per<br />

week. The website contains information and illustrations <strong>of</strong> 2020 native and naturalised species. The<br />

illustrations are a mixture <strong>of</strong> drawings, scanned prints, digital photographs and direct scans <strong>of</strong> leaves.<br />

Many people have contributed pictures and now about 60% are illustrated in some form or ano<strong>the</strong>r.


64 Offers / Book Notes<br />

Trifolium incarnatum ssp. molinerii<br />

Trifolium strictum<br />

Trinia glauca<br />

Tuberaria guttata<br />

Veronica spicata ssp. hybrida<br />

ANDREW SHAW, G<strong>of</strong>ynne, Llanynis, Builth Wells, Powys. LD2 3HN; andrewgshaw@hotmail.com<br />

BOOK NOTES<br />

Those that will not be reviewed in Watsonia are marked with an asterisk (*). Unattributed comments<br />

in square brackets are mine.<br />

Botaniska strovtag. Svenska och engelska. (Acta Academiae Regiae Gustavi Adolphi LXXXII). M<br />

Ryden. Pp. 182.2003. S<strong>of</strong>tback. 190 kr. ISSN 0065-0897. ISBN 91-85352-51-9.<br />

The Isle <strong>of</strong> Wight Flora. C. Pope, L.Snow & D. Allen. Pp. 255. The Dovecote Press, Wimborne,<br />

Dorset. 2003. Hardback. £35. ISBN 1 904349285.<br />

*Plant Conservation in Scotland - Articles deriving from <strong>the</strong> BSS Symposium, Edinburgh, 2002.<br />

BSS Issue 55.1. Price £16 (special <strong>of</strong>fer).<br />

[20 papers covering all plant groups and many habitats, many presented by <strong>BSBI</strong> members.]<br />

*The Natural History <strong>of</strong> Upper Teesdale. M.E. Bradshaw (ed.). Pp. 104. Durham Wildlife Trust.<br />

2003. Price £5 (no ISBN).<br />

[A 4th edn <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> original 1965 booklet. Some chapters are unchanged, but o<strong>the</strong>rs are completely<br />

new (at least since my 2 nd edn.).]<br />

*Review <strong>of</strong> non-native species policy - <strong>the</strong> DEFRA report is available on <strong>the</strong> web at:<br />

www.defra.gov.uk/wildlife-countryside/resproglfindings/non-native/index.htm<br />

* Fritillary - <strong>the</strong> journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ashmolean NHS <strong>of</strong> Oxfordshire and <strong>the</strong> Berkshire, Bucks & Oxfordshire<br />

Wildlife Trust. Available (at £6.00 for No. 2 & £6.50 for No. 3 from ANHSO Fritillary, &<br />

Eynsham Road, Botley, Oxford, OX2 9BS.<br />

[Copies <strong>of</strong> Numbers 2 & 3 have been passed to me. No. 2 contains articles on The flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Oxford Ring Road, Dandelions, <strong>the</strong> native Grape Hyacinth, farmland flowers (arable weeds!) -<br />

<strong>the</strong> last two particularly interesting. No. 3 has 9 articles on <strong>the</strong> Ecosystems <strong>of</strong> Oxfordshire valleyhead<br />

fens, includeing Cothill Fen, which I found extremely informative.]<br />

Vice-County Census Catalogue <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Vacular Plants <strong>of</strong> Great Britain, <strong>the</strong> Isle <strong>of</strong> Man and <strong>the</strong><br />

Channel Islands. Stace, C.A., Ellis, R.G., Kent, D.H., McCosh, DJ., eds. Pp. xxi+405. <strong>BSBI</strong>.<br />

2003. Price (sbk) £12. ISBN 0 901158 30 5.<br />

*Nature in Cambridgeshire, No. 45. 2000. 88pp. ISSN 0466 6046. Available from <strong>the</strong> Herbarium,<br />

Dept. <strong>of</strong> Plant Sciences, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3EA for £3.50 (incl. p&p) who also<br />

have copies <strong>of</strong> many back issues.<br />

[I have subscribed to this for <strong>the</strong> last 8 years and always found something <strong>of</strong> interest in this welledited<br />

and very modestly-priced journal. This issue contains a long article on one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Oxlip<br />

Woods, Kingston Wood, interesting records on <strong>the</strong> rich flora <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> ditches <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Ouse Washes, as<br />

well as half-a-dozen o<strong>the</strong>r articles and <strong>the</strong> usual plant records and book reviews.]<br />

DAVID PEARMAN, Algiers, Feock, Truro, Cornwall TR3 6RA; Tel: 01872 863388<br />

SUPPLEMENT TO ALIEN GRASSES OF THE BRITISH ISLES<br />

Supplement to Alien Grasses <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> T.B. Ryves and E.J. Clement. Pp. 4. 2003. Available,<br />

free <strong>of</strong> charge, from Summerfield Books - A5 s.a.e. required.<br />

[This short supplement contains new taxa and references, and notes and corrections.]<br />

CI'IRIS BOON, Secretary Publications Committee


66 Book Notes I Obituary Notes<br />

'DATING ONE'S BENTHAM' REPRIEVED<br />

My co-authors, David Allen, Philip Oswald and Mike Walpole, and I were delighted by <strong>the</strong> response<br />

from <strong>BSBI</strong> members to our note in <strong>the</strong> April News (pp.68-69) asking for help in tracing editions and<br />

(re-)issues <strong>of</strong> George Bentham's Handbook <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> flora. Indeed, although <strong>the</strong> same note was<br />

published in o<strong>the</strong>r places, only <strong>BSBI</strong> members responded! I will only mention one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> people who<br />

replied, <strong>the</strong> ever-helpful and surely very much missed Nora McMillan.<br />

Information <strong>BSBI</strong> members provided helped US to clarify <strong>the</strong> sequence <strong>of</strong> editions and issues.<br />

However <strong>the</strong> following remain elusive: 1880 and 1881 probable re-issues <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> fourth edition (which<br />

were cited by F.A. Stafleu and R.S. Cowan in Taxonomic literature edn 2), and an 1897 re-issue <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

sixth edition which N.D. Simpson listed in his 1960 A bibliographic index <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> flora.<br />

Simpson apparently saw this but we have not traced any copy. It is just possible, I think, that <strong>the</strong>se<br />

were misprints or mistakes <strong>of</strong> some o<strong>the</strong>r kind.<br />

The results <strong>of</strong> our delvings are published in a Short Note - 'George Bentham's Handbook <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>British</strong> flora (1858-1954) and associated works: a check-list <strong>of</strong> editions and issues' - in <strong>Archive</strong>s <strong>of</strong><br />

natural history 30(2): 250-254 (October 2003).<br />

Those who have Internet access are very welcome to download, for <strong>the</strong>ir personal use, a PDF file<br />

containing this paper from <strong>the</strong> <strong>Society</strong> for <strong>the</strong> History <strong>of</strong> Natural History's website; <strong>the</strong> URL is:<br />

http://www.shnh.org/PUB_ANH_Bentham.<strong>pdf</strong><br />

It is clear from those who replied that owning a copy <strong>of</strong> Bentham's Handbook is still very much<br />

part <strong>of</strong> our botanical tradition. Something we might celebrate on its sesquicentenary in 2008?<br />

E. CHARLES NELSON, Tippitiwitchet Cottage, Hall Road, Outwell, Wisbech, PE14 8PE;<br />

email: editor@shnh.org<br />

OBITUARY NOTES<br />

With much regret we report <strong>the</strong> following deaths.<br />

Dr F.H. Perring OBE, FLS <strong>of</strong> Oundle, Peterborough. On 24 October a large crowd <strong>of</strong> over two<br />

hundred, including many <strong>BSBI</strong> members, assembled at Stoke Doyle parish church in rural Northamptonshire<br />

for a service <strong>of</strong> thanksgiving for <strong>the</strong> life <strong>of</strong> Franklyn Perring. The herb-rich turf <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> churchyard<br />

reminded US <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> his great enthusiasms. Sunlight streamed through <strong>the</strong> clear windows.<br />

Readings included poems by John Clare, A.E. Housman, Robert Frost, Rupert Brooke, John Gilmour<br />

and Trevor Hold, and among <strong>the</strong> tributes was this personal reminiscence by Max Waiters, perhaps his<br />

longest and closest colleague in <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong>:<br />

'I have a few minutes this morning to try to tell you <strong>of</strong> my personal friendship with Frank Perring (I<br />

always called him Frank) - a friendship over some 60 years in fact. I do not recall our first meeting.<br />

Frank was among a small group <strong>of</strong> gifted, enthusiastic students which it was my good fortune to try to<br />

teach in <strong>the</strong> heady period in Cambridge University following <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> World War n. He had done his<br />

compulsory military service in <strong>the</strong> Army in Ireland, India and Malaya before coming up to Queens'College<br />

to read Natural Sciences. I joined <strong>the</strong> teaching staff <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>the</strong>n Botany School (now <strong>the</strong> Plant<br />

Sciences Dept.) as Curator <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Herbarium in 1948, and Frank was one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> really keen students who<br />

came on <strong>the</strong> first Continental European excursion I ran, which took place in Sweden in 1950.<br />

It was, <strong>of</strong> course, <strong>the</strong> <strong>Botanical</strong> <strong>Society</strong>'s Maps Scheme which really cemented our lifelong<br />

friendship. I remember how pleased I felt when, as newly-appointed part-time Director <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> project,<br />

I discovered that Frank would welcome <strong>the</strong> full-time post as 'Senior Worker' for <strong>the</strong> Atlas preparation,<br />

which he began in 1954 after completing his PhD. He subsequently took over from me as Director,<br />

and <strong>the</strong> Atlas appeared as our joint work in 1962.<br />

It was a pleasure to work with Frank: he was cheerful and optimistic - even when, as happened<br />

early in recruitment <strong>of</strong> volunteer field recorders, a single morning's mail, after some national press<br />

publicity, brought a flood <strong>of</strong> more than 800 letters, which threatened to engulf our small but devoted


Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings 69<br />

REPORTS OF FIELD MEETINGS - 2003<br />

Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings (with <strong>the</strong> exception <strong>of</strong> Reports <strong>of</strong> Irish Meetings written by Alan Hill) are<br />

edited by, and should be sent to: Dr Alan Showier, 12 Wedgwood Drive, Hughenden Valley, High<br />

Wycombe, Bucks, HPI4 4PA, Tel.: 01494 562082. Potential authors <strong>of</strong> reports should note that <strong>the</strong>y<br />

should not be much longer than 500 words (half a page <strong>of</strong> News) for a one day meeting and 1000<br />

words (I page <strong>of</strong> News) for a weekend.<br />

CASTELL DINAS BRAN, LLANGOLLEN, DENBIGHSHlRE (v.c. 50) 3,d May<br />

Ten people met at Dinas Bran School on an overcast morning, threatening rain, coming from far and<br />

near and arriving via a variety <strong>of</strong> transport. A singing Blackcap welcomed <strong>the</strong> group on <strong>the</strong> start <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

walk. Through <strong>the</strong> lanes we skirted <strong>the</strong> ruins <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 12th century castle, enjoying <strong>the</strong> spring flowers:<br />

Conopodium majus (Pignut), Anemone nemorosa (Wood Anemone), Mercurialis perennis (Dog's<br />

Mercury), Ranunculus auricomus (Goldilocks Buttercup), Stellaria holostea (Greater Stitchwort) and<br />

<strong>the</strong> delicate grass Melica uniflora (Wood Melick). A specimen <strong>of</strong> Poa angustifolia (Narrow-leaved<br />

Meadow-grass) was collected and later confirmed by Arthur Copping. Ranunculus ficaria (Lesser<br />

Celandine) in <strong>the</strong> hedgerow on closer inspection appeared to have a brown rust on its leaves. On<br />

roadside verges we found Allium vineale (Wild Onion), Sedum telephium (Orpine), Valerianella sp. (a<br />

cornsalad) and Fumaria sp. (a fumitory).<br />

At lunch time it rained heavily and after considering some smelly barns for shelter we all huddled<br />

under a tree with Viola odorata (Sweet Violet) beneath our feet. When we were all thoroughly soaked<br />

we set <strong>of</strong>f again on a path along a small bank in a field grazed by sheep. Suddenly Martin Rand fell to<br />

his knees and began inspecting <strong>the</strong> short turf closely. To everyone's astonishment he found Moenchia<br />

erecta (Upright Chickweed) - it was just past flowering. This find cheered everyone up and we all<br />

started crawling around on our hands and knees, discovering Ornithopus perpusillus (Bird's-foot),<br />

Aira praecox (Early Hair-grass) Erodium cicutarium (Common Stork's-bill), Myosotis discolor<br />

(Changing Forget-me-not) and Aphanes arvensis (Parsley-piert) also on <strong>the</strong> bank.<br />

We continued along <strong>the</strong> hedgerow and Graham noticed a hybrid Crataegus (hawthorn) with some<br />

flowers in <strong>the</strong> same panicle containing one style and o<strong>the</strong>rs two. While Graham searched <strong>the</strong> hedgerow<br />

<strong>the</strong> rest <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> group splashed about in a small wet flush with Juncus effusus (S<strong>of</strong>t-rush), Ranunculus<br />

fiammula (Lesser Spearwort), Cardamine pratensis (Cucko<strong>of</strong>lower), C. flexuosa (Wavy Bitter-cress)<br />

(all in flower), Veronica beccabunga (Brooklime) and Anagallis tenella (Bog Pimpernel). Large Alder<br />

trees (Alnus glutinosa) were admired before we joined <strong>the</strong> road again. Martin found Stellaria neglecta<br />

(Greater Chickweed); Lathyrus linifolius (Bitter Vetch) was just starting to flower and <strong>the</strong> fronds <strong>of</strong><br />

Pteridium aquilinum (Bracken) were sprouting up through <strong>the</strong> ground.<br />

We scrambled over <strong>the</strong> Eglwyseg limestone scree until we found Hornungia petraea (Hutchinsia),<br />

Erophila verna (Common Whitlowgrass), E. majuscula (Hairy Whitlowgrass), Medicago lupulina<br />

(Black Medick), Carex caryophyllea (Spring Sedge) and Catapodium rigidum (Fern-grass). In a little<br />

lay-by on <strong>the</strong> Eglwseg road Wendy McCarthy and Graham refound Filago minima (Small Cudweed).<br />

We <strong>the</strong>n crossed <strong>the</strong> fields and a little footbridge into an ancient woodland with a carpet <strong>of</strong><br />

Hyacinthoides non-scripta (Bluebell) and some Melampyrum pratense (Common Cow-wheat) just<br />

starting to flower. While walking through <strong>the</strong> wood we heard a Pied Flycatcher singing on an oak<br />

branch.<br />

My thanks to all those who came along to help make this a very enjoyable meeting and in finding<br />

over 100 speCies.<br />

EMILY MEILLEUR


70 Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings<br />

MURLOUGH, Co. DOWN (v.c. H38) 18 th May<br />

Murlough is a National Nature Reserve that is managed by <strong>the</strong> National Trust and comprises about<br />

280ha <strong>of</strong> mature stable dunes with heath and scrub. Seven members met on a bright but cool moming<br />

and made <strong>the</strong>ir way, with permission, onto <strong>the</strong> restricted part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Reserve where <strong>the</strong> public are not<br />

normally allowed.<br />

The ground is gently undulating and is mostly dominated by Festuca rubra (Red Fescue) and<br />

AmmophUa arenaria (Marram), with Calluna vulgaris (Hea<strong>the</strong>r) and Erica cinerea (Bell Hea<strong>the</strong>r).<br />

There are also extensive areas <strong>of</strong> Hyacinthoides non-scripta (Bluebell) and small groups and single<br />

specimens <strong>of</strong> Acer pseudoplatanus (Sycamore), Crataegus monogyna (Hawthorn) and Sambucus nigra<br />

(Elder). At <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> one particular rise, we found ourselves looking down <strong>the</strong> very steep slope <strong>of</strong> a<br />

deep blow-out. The upper slopes <strong>of</strong> this provided Aira praecox (Early Hair-grass), Cerastium diffusum<br />

(Sea Mouse-ear) and Ononis repens (Common Restharrow). The middle part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> slope was too<br />

steep to traverse with safety and without significant damage to <strong>the</strong> dune, so we made our way around<br />

<strong>the</strong> steepest slope, down into <strong>the</strong> blow-out. Here, about a quarter <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> bottom <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> blowout was<br />

covered by a dense group <strong>of</strong> A. pseudoplatanus with some ferns, Dryopteris jilix-mas (Male-fern) and<br />

D. dilatata (Broad Buckler-fern). On <strong>the</strong> large area <strong>of</strong> exposed sand were Erodium cicutarium<br />

(Common Stork's-bill), Filago minima (Small Cudweed), Myosotis ramosissima (Early Forget-menot)<br />

and Teesdalia nudicaulis (Shepherd's Cress). Moving from <strong>the</strong> blow-out towards <strong>the</strong> sea,<br />

Euphorbia paralias (Sea Spurge) and E. portlandica (Portland Spurge) were frequent amongst<br />

Ammophila arenaria. While returning to <strong>the</strong> cars for lunch, we noticed a small herd <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> ponies used<br />

by <strong>the</strong> National Trust to help manage <strong>the</strong> reserve.<br />

After lunch, <strong>the</strong> public boardwalk to <strong>the</strong> sea was used and several additions were made to our list.<br />

Most remarkable was Botrychium lunaria (Moonwort), <strong>of</strong> which <strong>the</strong>re were four fronds. We also saw<br />

Thalictrum minus (Lesser Meadow-rue) and more Teesdalia nudicaulis. There were several plants <strong>of</strong><br />

Cotoneaster simonsii (Himalayan Cotoneaster) and stands <strong>of</strong> Hippophae rhamnoides (Sea-buckthorn).<br />

The latter plant was first introduced into Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Ireland at Murlough and now forms large stands on<br />

some parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> coast where it has completely displaced native plants. Recording continued as we<br />

made our way around <strong>the</strong> Reserve, and we ended <strong>the</strong> day with a good list <strong>of</strong> Murlough specialities and<br />

<strong>the</strong> 'usuals'.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> objectives <strong>of</strong> this meeting was to relocate Vicia lathyroides (Spring Vetch) at<br />

Murlough, and this we failed to do. It had last been recorded at stations within Murlough about 10<br />

years ago. The ground was extensively searched and all likely plants carefully checked and found to<br />

be Vicia sativa (Common Vetch).<br />

GRAHAM DAY<br />

USKMOUTH WETLANDS RESERVE (v.c. 35) 5 th July<br />

13 people met Trevor Evans, <strong>the</strong> leader, at <strong>the</strong> car park <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> above reserve at 11.00. The banks <strong>of</strong> a<br />

lagoon nearby were searched for Ophrys apifera (Bee Orchid) without avail, nothing <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 50+ <strong>the</strong>re<br />

on 23,d June could be found. Anacamptis pyramidalis (Pyramidal Orchid) had fared better and a<br />

number <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong>m were counted. The Dactylorhiza praetermissa (Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Marsh-orchid) occurred in<br />

small numbers but were past <strong>the</strong>ir best. Some Lathyrus nissolia (Grass Vetchling) was noted here and<br />

was seen scattered over <strong>the</strong> reserve. Many common plants were named as some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> party had<br />

limited knowledge. Various common docks had <strong>the</strong>ir distinguishing features pointed out but like so<br />

many o<strong>the</strong>r closely related plants one learns <strong>the</strong> common ones, <strong>the</strong>n when o<strong>the</strong>rs are met that have<br />

some similar features, but unfamiliar characteristics as well, one is better prepared to add a new plant<br />

to one's memory. The track round <strong>the</strong> car park had several Puccinellia distans (Reflexed Saltmarshgrass)<br />

plants on it. Moving to <strong>the</strong> west a single Bee Orchid was found on a grassy strip where more<br />

Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Marsh-orchids were past <strong>the</strong>ir best. The cocoon <strong>of</strong> Zygaena jilipendulae (Six-spot Bumet)<br />

was stuck to <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> a stem nearby.


Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings 71<br />

The path wound round past <strong>the</strong> gatehouse to <strong>the</strong> Power Station and Lathyrus sylvestris<br />

(Narrow-leaved Everlasting-pea) and Lepidium latifolium (Dittander) lined it. Even more <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> latter<br />

covered <strong>the</strong> banks <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lagoons. More and better clusters <strong>of</strong> Epipactis palustris (Marsh Helleborine)<br />

began to appear and digital camera owners benefited in that <strong>the</strong>y could delete <strong>the</strong> first efforts as <strong>the</strong>y<br />

found bigger and better clusters. A large triangular rough grassland should have had a display <strong>of</strong><br />

peculiar very pale brown bee orchids, with pale pink sepals but like <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>rs <strong>the</strong>y 'had done <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

thing'. An area <strong>of</strong> Trifolium squamosum (Sea Clover) was viewed instead, drifts <strong>of</strong> which were later<br />

to be seen near <strong>the</strong> lagoon to <strong>the</strong> east <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lighthouse. A few metres more and on a bare gritty patch<br />

were 15 plants <strong>of</strong> Samolus valerandi (Brookweed) an uncommon v.c. plant and <strong>the</strong> first seen by <strong>the</strong><br />

leader this year (later, two more were seen by <strong>the</strong> end <strong>of</strong> a lagoon). Chenopodium glaucum<br />

(Oak-leaved Goosefoot) normally 20cm or more high was only one tenth <strong>of</strong> that in <strong>the</strong> dry hollow<br />

where normally some water remained. Vicia hirsuta (Hairy Tare) and V. tetrasperma (Smooth Tare)<br />

had been seen and compared, as we moved towards <strong>the</strong> R. Severn shore and our lunch. Before that, a<br />

search was made to find <strong>the</strong> lopsided cones <strong>of</strong> Pinus radiata (Monterey Pine). These cones remain on<br />

<strong>the</strong> branches for <strong>the</strong> life <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> tree and in California <strong>the</strong> heat <strong>of</strong> a forest fire is needed before <strong>the</strong> cones<br />

open to allow <strong>the</strong> seeds to fall, germinate and replace <strong>the</strong> destroyed parent. Needles in threes were<br />

noted. The morning walk ended overlooking a promontory at <strong>the</strong> mouth <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> R. Usk. A forest <strong>of</strong><br />

Heracleum mantegazzianum (Giant Hogweed) covered this mound and contrasted with <strong>the</strong> sprayed<br />

and collapsed yellowing plants inside <strong>the</strong> reserve. Lunch was taken overlooking <strong>the</strong> estuary but <strong>the</strong><br />

overcast skies and cool breezes kept <strong>the</strong> normally numerous flying insects skulking in <strong>the</strong> vegetation.<br />

Hirschfeldia incana (Hoary Mustard) was dotted along <strong>the</strong> track to <strong>the</strong> lighthouse, displaying its<br />

greyish green foliage, pale yellow flowers and siliquas , many <strong>of</strong> which ended in 'a minaret'. Several<br />

Raphanus raphanistrum ssp. maritimus (Sea Radish) poked through <strong>the</strong> fence and showed <strong>the</strong>ir fattish<br />

pods constricted between <strong>the</strong>ir seeds. It was <strong>the</strong> large number <strong>of</strong> patches <strong>of</strong> Lathyrus sylvestris at <strong>the</strong><br />

side <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> tracks by <strong>the</strong> lagoons that attracted most attention. E <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> lighthouse Apium graveolens<br />

(Wild Celery) was observed, its odour confirming it. The E end <strong>of</strong> a lagoon was sampled for<br />

Myriophyllum spicatum (Spiked Water-milfoil), Zannichellia palustris (Homed Pondweed),<br />

Ceratophyllum demersum (Rigid Hornwort) and a Chara sp. (Stonewort). Making our way to<br />

overlook <strong>the</strong> vegetated foreshore we came to an area <strong>of</strong> low vegetation with Salicornia ramosissima<br />

(Purple Glasswort) dominating, <strong>the</strong>n an almost dry, very shallow pool supporting scattered Veronica<br />

scutellata (Marsh Speedwell) and finally an area <strong>of</strong> large patches <strong>of</strong> hundreds <strong>of</strong> Dactylorhiza<br />

praetermissa. From <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> low cliffs here large patches <strong>of</strong> blue indicated <strong>the</strong> presence <strong>of</strong><br />

Limonium vulgare (Common Sea-lavender) growing among <strong>the</strong> usual littoral plants <strong>of</strong> a muddy<br />

estuary. Before arriving back at <strong>the</strong> cars a stop was made to examine some Sison amomum (Stone<br />

Parsley) a common feature <strong>of</strong> lane sides near <strong>the</strong> R. Severn.<br />

Footnote: The plantain Tony Lewis thought might be Plantago major ssp. intermedia turned out to be<br />

<strong>the</strong> commoner ssp. major, none <strong>of</strong> its capsules had more than 12 seeds in <strong>the</strong>m, some should have at<br />

least 14 seeds to be ssp. intermedia.<br />

TREvOR EVANS<br />

LOCKERBIE.DuMFRJESSHJRE (v.c. 72) 18'h_20'h July<br />

Seven people took part in <strong>the</strong> field meeting over a weekend <strong>of</strong> changeable wea<strong>the</strong>r. The objective for<br />

<strong>the</strong> three days was to visit tetrads in eastern Dumfriesshire as part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> local change project.<br />

First stop Friday morning was Lochmaben (NY08W) <strong>the</strong> birth place <strong>of</strong> Robert <strong>the</strong> Bruce. This is<br />

probably <strong>the</strong> most complex <strong>of</strong> all <strong>the</strong> tetrads to be covered in v.c. 72 and at 273 species was <strong>the</strong> richest<br />

in 1987/88. The tetrad includes much <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> town itself, parts <strong>of</strong> two <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> town's seven lochs and part<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> river Annan. On <strong>the</strong> Castle Loch, <strong>the</strong>re was a good range <strong>of</strong> aquatic and reed swamp species<br />

including Cicuta virosa (Cowbane), Oenan<strong>the</strong> crocata (Hemlock Water-dropwort), Iris pseudacorus<br />

(Yellow Iris), Glyceria maxima (Reed Sweet-grass), Lythrum salicaria (Purple- loosestrife) and<br />

Phragmites australis (Common Reed). On <strong>the</strong> outlet to <strong>the</strong> Mill Loch was a raft <strong>of</strong> Nymphoides peltata


72 Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings<br />

(Fringed Water-lily), apparently introduced since <strong>the</strong> last survey and now threatening to spread over<br />

much <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> loch. An elderly lady on enquiring what we were doing pointed out <strong>the</strong> location <strong>of</strong> a 'rare'<br />

flower drawn to her attention by <strong>the</strong> late Mary Martin, previous v.c. recorder. Mary had lived for many<br />

years in Lochmaben and had led botanical evening classes at which this lady had been shown this plant.<br />

We wouldn't o<strong>the</strong>rwise have seen Lamium maculatum (Spotted Dead-nettle) which was hidden under a<br />

hedge. The group who explored <strong>the</strong> area towards <strong>the</strong> river had a narrow escape from an aggressive<br />

horse, which prevented closer inspection <strong>of</strong> an old river meander.<br />

In <strong>the</strong> afternoon we visited <strong>the</strong> Tinwald tetrad (NY08A) on <strong>the</strong> face <strong>of</strong> it a habitat poor square <strong>of</strong><br />

arable and improved grassland on <strong>the</strong> Torthorwald Ridge. Some interesting habitat was found<br />

however, grassy banks produced Hypericum x desetangsii (Des Etangs' St 10hn's-wort), Hypericum<br />

humifUsum (Trailing St 10hn's-wort), Sedum telephium (Orpine), Trifolium medium (Zigzag Clover)<br />

and in bare places clumps <strong>of</strong> Senecio viscosus (Sticky Groundsel). Near <strong>the</strong> Lochar Water <strong>the</strong>re was<br />

an area <strong>of</strong> wet acid grassland with Molinia caerulea (Purple Moor-grass), Potentilla palustris (Marsh<br />

Cinquefoil), Senecio aquaticus (Marsh Ragwort), Viola palustris (Marsh Violet) and Veronica<br />

scutellata (Marsh Speedwell). After a walk negotiating a wandering bull, Shaws Hill <strong>of</strong>fered fine<br />

views over Dumfries to <strong>the</strong> Solway. A small lochan had Carex roslrata (Bottle Sedge), Lycopus<br />

europaeus (Gypsywort) and Lychnis flos-cuculi (Ragged-Robin). Small streams produced Glyceria<br />

notata (Plicate Sweet-grass) and Ranunculus hederaceus (Ivy-leaved Crowfoot).<br />

On <strong>the</strong> Saturday <strong>the</strong> group met at Bigholms farm (tetrad NY38A) and divided attention between<br />

<strong>the</strong> Bigholms burn, adjacent lowland mire and <strong>the</strong> moorland to <strong>the</strong> south <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> road. The burn and its<br />

tributaries had some calcareous springs and flushes. Amongst <strong>the</strong> finds were Briza media<br />

(Quaking-grass), Caltha palustris (Marsh Marigold), Carex hostiana (Tawny Sedge), Carex distichta<br />

(Brown Sedge), Carex pallescens (Pale Sedge), Linum catharticum (Fairy Flax), Parnassia palustris<br />

(Grass-<strong>of</strong>-Parnassus), Sagina nodosa (Knotted Pearlwort) and Valeriana dioica (Marsh Valerian)<br />

approaching its north west limits. In <strong>the</strong> river Carex acutiformis (Lesser Pond-Sedge) was a good find.<br />

On <strong>the</strong> mires <strong>the</strong>re were typical wefts <strong>of</strong> Vaccinium oxycoccus (Cranberry) and surprising quantities <strong>of</strong><br />

Andromeda polifolia (Bog-rosemary). On <strong>the</strong> wetter areas Carex curta (White Sedge) grew scattered<br />

across Sphagnum lawns.<br />

In <strong>the</strong> afternoon we moved to <strong>the</strong> south <strong>of</strong> Langholm to tetrad NY38W. This is partly on <strong>the</strong><br />

Langholm and Newcastleton Hills SSSI, an extensive upland moorland. Just south <strong>of</strong> Cronksbank<br />

farm <strong>the</strong> Tarras water has cut a deep valley with deciduous woodland and some calcareous flushes<br />

coming out <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> hillside. Immediate attention was drawn to an extensive stand <strong>of</strong> Equisetum<br />

telmateia (Great Horsetail). Michael Braithwaite was on hand to confirm Trichophorum cespitosum<br />

nothospp.foersteri (a deergrass). Carex laevigata (Smooth-stalked Sedge), Carex paniculata (Greater<br />

Tussock-sedge) and Carex lasiocarpa (Slender Sedge) were amongst 17 Carex species found. A<br />

search for Trientalis europaea (Chickweed-wintergreen) was fruitless under towering bracken and will<br />

have to be looked for earlier next year. Out <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> valley <strong>the</strong> dry heath had been extensively burnt<br />

earlier in <strong>the</strong> year and <strong>the</strong> vegetation was only just recovering. Despite this, typical dwarf shrubs like<br />

Calluna vulgaris (Ling), Erica tetralix (Cross-leaved Heath) and Erica cinerea (Bell Hea<strong>the</strong>r) and<br />

good quantities <strong>of</strong> Vaccinium vitis-idaea (Cowberry) were coming away with <strong>the</strong> surprisingly resilient<br />

Drosera rotundifolia (Round-leaved Sundew) on bare patches <strong>of</strong> peat.<br />

On <strong>the</strong> way back to Lockerbie we passed through tetrad NY38J so a quick visit was made to look<br />

along <strong>the</strong> banks <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Esk at Burnfoot. The river here has woodland along <strong>the</strong> banks and is not<br />

grazed. Typical woodland edge species included Bromopsis ramosa (Hairy-brome), Brachypodium<br />

sylvaticum (False Brome) and Geranium sylvaticum (Wood Crane's-bill). On <strong>the</strong> river bank <strong>the</strong>re was<br />

Symphytum t1,lberosum (Tuberous Comfrey) and Stellaria nemorum (Wood Stitchwort).<br />

On <strong>the</strong> Sunday we aITanged to meet at <strong>the</strong> Devils Beef Tub north <strong>of</strong> M<strong>of</strong>fat to look at a square on<br />

<strong>the</strong> M<strong>of</strong>fat Hills. Unfortunately rain <strong>of</strong> tropical intensity meant it was hard to see out <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> car and we<br />

retreated to a lower tetrad near Parkgate (NY08J). This had more intensive agriculture but some<br />

higher ground that looked interesting. Part <strong>of</strong> a small loch falls in <strong>the</strong> square and this had a good<br />

population <strong>of</strong> Cicuta virosa (Cowbane) toge<strong>the</strong>r with Apium inundatum (Lesser Marshwort), Lythrum<br />

portula (Water-purslane) and Potentilla palustris (Marsh Cinquefoil). On a roadside verge we found


Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings 73<br />

Carex muricata ssp. lamprocarpa (Prickly Sedge) and on <strong>the</strong> wall around a church hall Ceterach<br />

ojjicinarum (Rustyback). In afternoon <strong>the</strong> owners <strong>of</strong> Kirkland Farm allowed us to walk across <strong>the</strong>ir<br />

hill and explore an interesting gully and an area <strong>of</strong> rough grassland. Carex laevigata (Smooth-stalked<br />

Sedge) was found again, this time growing along a burn outwith woodland. On <strong>the</strong> open poorly<br />

drained rough grassland <strong>the</strong>re was plenty <strong>of</strong> Crepis paludosa (Marsh Hawk's-beard) and Carex<br />

binervis (Green-ribbed Sedge) toge<strong>the</strong>r with Hydrocotyle vulgaris (Marsh Pennywort), Viola palustris<br />

(Marsh violet), Nar<strong>the</strong>cium ossifragum (Bog Asphodel) and small quantities <strong>of</strong> Parnassia palustris<br />

(Grass-<strong>of</strong>-Parnassus).<br />

Overall a good three days work and a major advance made for 6 <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> 13 tetrads to be covered in<br />

Dumfriesshire.<br />

CHRIS MILES<br />

CARMARTHENSHIRE RECORDING MEETING (v.c. 44) 26 th July - 2 nd August<br />

By popular request, <strong>the</strong> annual Carmar<strong>the</strong>nshire Recording Meeting was extended from a weekend to a<br />

full week. The intention was to include a mix <strong>of</strong> both experienced and less experienced botanists and<br />

referees were to be invited to deal with a selection <strong>of</strong> critical groups and species. Our aspirations in<br />

<strong>the</strong>se respects were more than adequately fulfilled with over twenty members from all over <strong>the</strong> country<br />

taking part including both local and national experts.<br />

Most participants arrived in time for lunch on Saturday 26 th July at Glynhir, near Ammanford,<br />

which was to be our base for <strong>the</strong> week. The first visit in <strong>the</strong> afternoon was to <strong>the</strong> disused<br />

Glangwenlais Carboniferous Limestone Quarry in <strong>the</strong> Carmel Woods National Nature Reserve, where<br />

Tony and Viv Lewis showed <strong>the</strong> party a few rosettes <strong>of</strong> Dipsacus pilosus (Small Teasel) at <strong>the</strong><br />

entrance. Nearby a Euphrasia (eyebright) with an upright habit and distinctive acute leaf-lobes was<br />

later determined by Alan Silverside (AJS) as Euphrasia arctica ssp. cf. arctica, a new record for <strong>the</strong><br />

lOkm square and only <strong>the</strong> 3,d v.c. record. O<strong>the</strong>r noteworthy records included Elymus caninus (Bearded<br />

Couch), Sanguisorba ojjicinalis (Greater Burnet) and Carex distans (Distant Sedge) and at <strong>the</strong> margin<br />

<strong>of</strong> a small pool, Triglochin palustre (Marsh Arrowgrass).<br />

The next visit was just a few hundred metres away to Pentregwenlais Quarry, ano<strong>the</strong>r disused<br />

limestone working with tall imposing lime kilns bearing <strong>the</strong> date 1903. By <strong>the</strong> track was a single plant<br />

<strong>of</strong> what was considered by <strong>the</strong> ga<strong>the</strong>ring to be Rumex crispus x R. sanguineus x R. obtusifolius (a<br />

hybrid dock) but its identity remains unconfirmed. Fur<strong>the</strong>r on, <strong>the</strong> party was shown Equisetum<br />

variegatum (Variegated Horsetail) in abundance in flushed pools toge<strong>the</strong>r with E. palustre (Marsh<br />

Horsetail), E. arvense (Common Horsetail) and E. xlitorale (E. fluviatile x E. arvense) (Shore<br />

Horsetail) and material was collected for later examination in <strong>the</strong> hope <strong>of</strong> proving fur<strong>the</strong>r hybrids.<br />

After dinner, during <strong>the</strong> evening session, Sam Thomas spent several hours examining <strong>the</strong> specimens<br />

under <strong>the</strong> microscope and putatively determined some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> material as E. xrothmaleri (E. arvense x<br />

E. palustre).<br />

On Sunday 27th July we had arranged to join Plantlife members to visit <strong>the</strong> Plantlife grassland<br />

reserve at Cae Blaen Dyffryn, south <strong>of</strong> Lampeter. Several Dryopteris (Male-fern) taxa were present in<br />

<strong>the</strong> hedge by <strong>the</strong> car-park and Sam Thomas was able to demonstrate <strong>the</strong> subtle differences between<br />

D. affinis ssp. cambrensis and D. affinis ssp. ajjinis (Scaly Male-ferns). After a short introduction to<br />

<strong>the</strong> reserve by Dr Trevor Dines, Plantlife members split into small groups in order to carry out quadrat<br />

recording in <strong>the</strong> dry, more neutral parts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> site whilst <strong>the</strong> <strong>BSBI</strong> party was asked to plot <strong>the</strong> extent <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> population <strong>of</strong> Danthonia decumbens (Heath Grass). Species <strong>of</strong> particular interest on <strong>the</strong> dry<br />

south-facing' slope included a few plants <strong>of</strong> purple flowered Viola lutea (Mountain Pansy) and an<br />

abundance <strong>of</strong> Campanula rotundifolia (Harebell), and in <strong>the</strong> wet, Molinia caerulea (Purple<br />

Moor-grass) and Juncus (rush) dominated south-east corner <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> site, Carum verticillatum (Whorled<br />

Caraway), Scutellaria minor (Lesser Skullcap), Nar<strong>the</strong>cium ossifragum (Bog Asphodel), Dryopteris<br />

carthusiana (Narrow Buckler-fern) and D. xdeweveri (a hybrid Buckler-fern) were recorded. The<br />

reserve is noted for its abundance <strong>of</strong> Butterfly-orchids with 3480 P. bifolia (Lesser Butterfly-orchid)


74 Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings<br />

and 2440 P. chlorantha (Greater Butterfly-orchid) counted in 2002. At <strong>the</strong> time <strong>of</strong> our visit, most had<br />

finished flowering but after lunch, all present spread out in a line at <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> field and slowly<br />

walked downhill counting all <strong>the</strong> orchid spikes as <strong>the</strong>y went. The total tally was 1923, it not being<br />

possible to certainly distinguish between <strong>the</strong> two species in seed. This is likely to be an underestimate,<br />

as plants are less conspicuous in seed and when looking south into <strong>the</strong> sun and downhill.<br />

On <strong>the</strong> return to Glynhir, a short stop was made to revisit <strong>the</strong> Equisetum populations at<br />

Pentregwenlais Quarry with Trevor Dines, as he has particular interest and expertise in <strong>the</strong> Equisetum<br />

hybrids having recently discovered E. xrichardsii, new to science, in North Wales.<br />

The wea<strong>the</strong>r on Monday 28'h started fine but by lunchtime <strong>the</strong> rain started in earnest and continued<br />

almost incessantly until Thursday! After breakfast, <strong>the</strong> party travelled to Tireithin Farm, on <strong>the</strong><br />

nor<strong>the</strong>rn side <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Gwendraeth Fawr valley above Pontyberem where we met Andrew Stevens who<br />

had arranged access with <strong>the</strong> owners, Sue and Tony Mat<strong>the</strong>ws. Mike Porter joined us for <strong>the</strong> day and<br />

identified most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> brambles as well as taking away specimens for later determination. The<br />

hedge-bank by <strong>the</strong> track supported some fine plants <strong>of</strong> Dryopteris affinis ssp. cambrensis, whilst parts<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> adjacent pastures were white with Carum verticillatum. The highlight was <strong>the</strong> opportunity to<br />

examine an extensive valley mire occupying <strong>the</strong> impervious linear hollow between <strong>the</strong> outcrops <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Farewell Rock and <strong>the</strong> Basal Grits <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Millstone Grit Series. Eriophorum vaginatum (Hare's-tail<br />

Cottongrass), E. angustifolium (Common Cottongrass), Nar<strong>the</strong>cium ossifragum, and Drosera<br />

rotundifolia (Common Sundew) were all frequent locally, and a few plants <strong>of</strong> Vaccinium oxycoccos<br />

(Cranberry) were also present scrambling over <strong>the</strong> Sphagnum (bog-moss) carpet. Arthur Chater<br />

confirmed <strong>the</strong> identity <strong>of</strong> Carex hostiana x C. viridula ssp. oedocarpa (c. xfulva) (a hybrid sedge),<br />

growing in <strong>the</strong> vicinity <strong>of</strong> both parents, and determined <strong>the</strong> Trichophorum cespitosum (Deergrass) as<br />

var. germanicum. Sandwiches were eaten somewhat hastily under <strong>the</strong> shelter <strong>of</strong> umbrellas before<br />

continuing to ano<strong>the</strong>r part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> mire where <strong>the</strong> vegetation was more base-rich and included stands <strong>of</strong><br />

Cirsium dissectum (Meadow Thistle), Serratula tinctoria (Saw-wort), Carex pulicaris (Flea Sedge)<br />

and Carex hostiana (Tawny Sedge). Returning to <strong>the</strong> cars a small population <strong>of</strong> Ophioglossum<br />

vulgatum (Adder's-tongue) was seen growing beneath an open Prunus spinosa (Blackthorn) thicket: it<br />

was surmised that it owed its survival to <strong>the</strong> thorn bushes protecting it from <strong>the</strong> grazing goats.<br />

A short stop was made at Gorswen Quarry near Maesybont on <strong>the</strong> way back to Glynhir. The rain<br />

was very heavy by now, but <strong>the</strong> population <strong>of</strong> Equisetum hyemale (Rough Horsetail), known since <strong>the</strong><br />

1950s, was found to be more extensive along <strong>the</strong> roadside hedge-banks than previously recorded.<br />

Rorippa islandica (Nor<strong>the</strong>rn Yellow-cress) and R. palustris (Marsh Yellow-cress) were growing<br />

toge<strong>the</strong>r in shallow ephemeral puddles on <strong>the</strong> floor <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> disused quarry, both new records for this<br />

site.<br />

The rain continued all Tuesday but did not deter <strong>the</strong> majority <strong>of</strong> participants from enthusiastically<br />

braving <strong>the</strong> Welsh wea<strong>the</strong>r! However, Dr Alan Silverside, Arthur Chater and Richard Pryce sensibly<br />

stayed in to study Euphrasias during <strong>the</strong> morning as many specimens had been sent for Alan to<br />

determine: his timely arrival just before breakfast had provided a perfect excuse to avoid going out in<br />

<strong>the</strong> rain! Jean Green, Margot Godfrey, Ailsa Burns and Caroline Tero decided to visit <strong>the</strong> National<br />

Botanic Garden <strong>of</strong> Wales at Middleton and <strong>the</strong> nearby Aberglasney Gardens. They were impressed<br />

with both and also managed to record many weeds! Sam Thomas, Hea<strong>the</strong>r Slade, Graham Kay, John<br />

Killick and Roy Vickery headed <strong>of</strong>f to meet James and Mary Iliffat Blaenau, near Llanddeusant, in <strong>the</strong><br />

upper Sawdde valley, in order to do some Local Change recording in SN72W. The vegetation<br />

included most species expected from this upland, sheep-decimated site and Saxifraga hypnoides<br />

(Mossy Saxifrage) and Equisetum variegatum were re-found in riverside flushes. Euphrasia<br />

specimens c.ollected by Sam were examined later by Alan Silverside and amongst <strong>the</strong> E. confusa<br />

(previously known from <strong>the</strong> site) were some plants which fitted <strong>the</strong> characters <strong>of</strong> E. rivularis.<br />

Trevor Evans and Roger Maskew arrived after breakfast on Wednesday 30'h and joined <strong>the</strong> group<br />

visiting Carreg Cennen Castle, one aim <strong>of</strong> which was to monitor roses recorded in <strong>the</strong> past by Mrs<br />

Vaughan (v.c. Recorder until 1978). However, <strong>the</strong> result was largely disappointing although some <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> site's specialities were seen including Veronica spicata ssp. hybrida (Spiked Speedwell), Allium<br />

schoenoprasum (Chives) and Sorbus porrigentiformis (Spreading Whitebeam). Meanwhile Margot


Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings 75<br />

Godfrey, Hea<strong>the</strong>r Slade, Kath Cottingham and Richard Pryce travelled to Llanpumsaint to record<br />

SN42J for <strong>the</strong> Local Change scheme. Permission was obtained to look at land including an<br />

ornamental lake which had been excavated since <strong>the</strong> 1986-87 Monitoring Scheme. The surrounding<br />

fields, woodland and river were also examined but some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most notable records came from <strong>the</strong><br />

farmyard where Rorippa islandica and Nicandra physalodes (Apple-<strong>of</strong>-Peru) were growing in <strong>the</strong><br />

gravel (both first records for <strong>the</strong> 10km square). The owner had sown a wildflower mix on an area <strong>of</strong><br />

spread subsoil and this had yielded An<strong>the</strong>mis austriaca (Austrian Chamomile) (a new v.c. record),<br />

Centaurea cyanus (Cornflower) and Agrostemma githago (Corncockle). The lake had an alarmingly<br />

large raft <strong>of</strong> Nymphoides peltata (Fringed Water-lily) but Hypericum elodes (Marsh St John's-wort),<br />

Potentilla palustris (Marsh Cinquefoil) and Menyan<strong>the</strong>s trifoliata (Bogbean) were frequent around <strong>the</strong><br />

margins and Dryopteris carthusiana, Scutellaria minor (Lesser Scullcap) and Carex rostrata (Bottle<br />

Sedge) were in a nearby fen where Hea<strong>the</strong>r also discovered a sloughed Grass Snake skin.<br />

On Thursday, one group planned to go to Cilycwm to try to re-find some <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> roses recorded by<br />

Mrs Vaughan in <strong>the</strong> 1950s, '60s and '70s. On arrival, it was obvious that <strong>the</strong> task would not be as easy<br />

or rewarding as was hoped, because all <strong>the</strong> hedgerows were overly manicured and although roses were<br />

frequent, we were hard-pressed to find fruits on many plants. However, seven Rosa taxa were<br />

recorded in <strong>the</strong> morning, including R. tomentosa (Harsh Downy-rose), although Mrs Vaughan's<br />

R. stylosa (Short-styled Field-rose) plants were not seen. As a bonus, Rorippa islandica was found to<br />

be quite frequent at several locations along <strong>the</strong> roadside verge (a new 10km square record for SN74).<br />

After lunch, more lane-tramping resulted in only one new rose being added to <strong>the</strong> list (Rosa arvensis<br />

(t) x R. canina (m» and it was decided that Roger Maskew would continue on his own to fur<strong>the</strong>r<br />

examine <strong>the</strong> roadside hedges, whilst <strong>the</strong> remainder <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> group would go on to Blaenau,<br />

Llanddeusant, to search for <strong>the</strong> possible Euphrasia rivularis. Roger was successful in finding four<br />

hybrids not seen previously, including R. sherardii (t) x R. arvensis (m), a rose new to <strong>the</strong> v.c, which<br />

was later confirmed by Tony Primavesi. The Euphrasia group quickly refound <strong>the</strong> site discovered by<br />

Tuesday's party and <strong>the</strong> identity <strong>of</strong> E. rivularis was confirmed by Alan Silverside, a new v.c. record <strong>of</strong><br />

a UK Biodiversity Action Plan and Section 74 species (see colour section, plate 3). It was<br />

characteristically growing in base-rich flushes with, for example, Briza media (Quaking Grass) and<br />

Linum catharticum (Fairy Flax), whereas <strong>the</strong> E. confosa plants were invariably in drier, more acid<br />

grassland. A rapid search <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> area confirmed E. rivularis to be frequent in <strong>the</strong> Old Red Sandstone<br />

flushes spanning two 10km squares (SN72 and SN82). On <strong>the</strong> journey back, <strong>the</strong> cars were held-up by<br />

a flock <strong>of</strong> sheep being driven across <strong>the</strong> road near Llanddeusant. Suddenly Trevor Evans jumped out,<br />

having seen a plant <strong>of</strong> Vicia orobus (Wood Bitter-vetch) growing on <strong>the</strong> roadside bank, a new site for<br />

<strong>the</strong> species!<br />

Meanwhile, two o<strong>the</strong>r groups had been recording tetrads for Local Change. The results included<br />

yet ano<strong>the</strong>r Rorippa islandica record and Berberis vulgaris (Barberry), both from SN42W, and<br />

Matricaria recutita (Scented Mayweed) and Orchis mascula (Early Purple-orchid) from SNI2A.<br />

Friday I SI August turned out, at last, to be sunny and hot, in fact, <strong>the</strong> start <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> prolonged sunny<br />

spell which was to follow! The whole party travelled down <strong>the</strong> Gwendraeth valley in order to visit <strong>the</strong><br />

coastal dunes at Pembrey Forest. In <strong>the</strong> area where we parked, Centaurium littorale (Seaside<br />

Centaury), C. pulchellum (Lesser Centaury) and C. erythraea (Common Centaury) were all in flower<br />

in a winter-flooding sandy ride-verge in <strong>the</strong> same vicinity as <strong>the</strong> single plant <strong>of</strong> Scirpoides<br />

holoschoenus (Round-headed Club-rush) discovered here <strong>the</strong> previous year. Isolepis cernua (Slender<br />

Club-rush) was frequent nearby and Baldellia ranunculoides (Lesser Water-plantain) and Pyrola<br />

rotundifolia ssp. maritima (Round-leaved Wintergreen) were occasional. In one area <strong>of</strong> dry dunes<br />

Parentucellia viscosa (Yellow Bartsia) was frequent and roses later confirmed by Roger Maskew<br />

included Rosa stylosa, R. canina (t) x R. stylosa (m) and R. tomentosa (t) x R. canina (m), which were<br />

additional to R. micrantha (Small-flowered Sweet-briar) determined in <strong>the</strong> field by Graham Kay and<br />

Arthur Chater. To round-<strong>of</strong>f <strong>the</strong> day <strong>the</strong> party visited <strong>the</strong> beach where characteristic species included a<br />

single plant <strong>of</strong> Atriplex laciniata (Frosted Orache) and <strong>the</strong> rare strandIine woodlouse Armadillidium<br />

album which was found under a large piece <strong>of</strong> flotsam.


76 Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings<br />

After dinner <strong>the</strong> group was treated to an informal but informative walk at Glynhir, when Roy<br />

Vickery gave us <strong>the</strong> benefit <strong>of</strong> his considerable knowledge relating to <strong>the</strong> folklore <strong>of</strong> plants, using<br />

specimens, both native and planted, growing in <strong>the</strong> walled-garden.<br />

After breakfast on Saturday 2nd, <strong>the</strong> party were sorry to have to break-up as participants departed to<br />

<strong>the</strong>ir various corners <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> country. All had enjoyed <strong>the</strong> week, despite <strong>the</strong> generally poor wea<strong>the</strong>r, and<br />

all, even <strong>the</strong> 'experts', had learnt a lot. The leaders would like to thank all participants' contributions,<br />

particularly <strong>the</strong> referees and experts who were present. The extended duration <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> meeting had also<br />

provided <strong>the</strong> opportunity to revisit both Pentregwenlais Quarry and Blaenau, L1anddeusant, in order to<br />

re-examine critical plants found earlier in <strong>the</strong> week.<br />

KATH COTTlNGHAM & RICHARD PRYCE<br />

BEN MORE, MULL (v.c. 103) 30 th July - I't August<br />

The Ben More square is one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> most challenging on <strong>the</strong> island <strong>of</strong> Mull, rising from sea level to<br />

966m. The 3 tetrads, A, J and Ware located on <strong>the</strong> SW slopes, <strong>the</strong> nor<strong>the</strong>rn shore, and <strong>the</strong> steep-sided<br />

valley <strong>of</strong> Glen Cannel on <strong>the</strong> eastern side. This gave <strong>the</strong> group <strong>of</strong> 17 members more than enough<br />

habitats and aspects to be explored and recorded for <strong>the</strong> Local Change project.<br />

The group divided up into three and everyone set <strong>of</strong>f on a fine day on July 30 to cover as much <strong>of</strong><br />

<strong>the</strong> tetrads as possible. Some areas were easily accessible but o<strong>the</strong>rs involved a reasonable climb and<br />

walk-in. We exchanged notes in <strong>the</strong> evening at Salen, and one group asked me if we had found<br />

anything <strong>of</strong> particular note, in return saying <strong>the</strong>y had found masses <strong>of</strong> Pinguicula lusitanica (Pale<br />

Butterwort) and a few plants <strong>of</strong> Spiran<strong>the</strong>s romanzoJfiana (Irish Lady's-tresses). I commented -<br />

P. lusitanica is abundant on Mull and <strong>the</strong>re's not much chance <strong>of</strong> your having found S. romanzoJfiana.<br />

Not to be put <strong>of</strong>f by this, <strong>the</strong>y restated that <strong>the</strong>y had found Spiran<strong>the</strong>s. So, having described <strong>the</strong> habitat<br />

perfectly, we all set <strong>of</strong>f after dinner to verify <strong>the</strong> find - two flowering plants were enjoyed by all <strong>the</strong><br />

party - and this was only day one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> trip! The species has previously been recorded from Mull<br />

but this was an unexpected and welcome find. It just proves that many pairs <strong>of</strong> botanical eyes turn up<br />

good records.<br />

The groups in tetrads A and W had a tougher task regarding <strong>the</strong> terrain and did not have such<br />

spectacular finds, but still recorded more species than previously found in 1987, including some<br />

base-rich species in restricted patches - Gymnocarpium dryopteris (Oak Fern), Cirsium<br />

heterophyllum (Melancholy Thistle), Scutellaria minor (Lesser Skullcap), Luzula spicata (Spiked<br />

Wood-rush), Silene acaulis (Moss Campion), Teesdalia nudicaulis (Shepherd's Cress), Cystopteris<br />

fragilis (Brittle Bladder-fern) and possibly Alchemilla glomerulans (a lady's-mantle).<br />

On <strong>the</strong> second day, which must have been one <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> wettest this year, two groups set out along <strong>the</strong><br />

nor<strong>the</strong>rn shores <strong>of</strong> Loch Ba, where Subularia aquatica (Awlwort) was relocated on <strong>the</strong> gravelly<br />

shoreline, and Scleranthus annuus (Annual Knawel) found on <strong>the</strong> gravel track. The third group<br />

returned ( gluttons for punishment) to tetrad W in Glen Cannel. A search was made for <strong>the</strong> only<br />

record <strong>of</strong> Ranunculus auricomus (Goldilocks Buttercup) in Mull, despite it not being <strong>the</strong> ideal time <strong>of</strong><br />

year for this species, but it was not relocated. However, a full survey <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> steep, rocky slopes,<br />

gorges, scattered woodland, wet grassland, bog and riversides was achieved.<br />

The last day was spent on <strong>the</strong> island <strong>of</strong> Ulva, and everyone recorded in <strong>the</strong> one tetrad around U1va<br />

House and <strong>the</strong> ferry. This might have seemed a bit <strong>of</strong> overkill, but I knew that this was a very rich<br />

area, and it proved to occupy <strong>the</strong> whole group throughout <strong>the</strong> day. The variety <strong>of</strong> habitats -<br />

saItmarsh, tracks, mature woodland, grassland, rock outcrops and wet heath - all add to <strong>the</strong> botanical<br />

and scenic diversity. We were able to provide <strong>the</strong> owner, Jamie Howard, with a full list <strong>of</strong> plants in<br />

<strong>the</strong> environs <strong>of</strong> his house. Salicornia spp. (glassworts), Juncus maritimus (Sea Rush), Gentianella<br />

campestris (Field Gentian), Ligusticum scoticum (Scots Lovage), Allium ursinum (Ramsons), Blysmus<br />

rufus (SaItmarsh Flat-sedge), Bolboschoenus maritimus (Sea Club-rush), Carex extensa (Long-bracted<br />

Sedge), Crepis capillaris (Smooth Hawk's-beard), Eleogiton fluitans (Floating Club-rush),


Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings 77<br />

Platan<strong>the</strong>ra bifolia (Lesser Butterfly-orchid) and Sanicula europaea (Sanicle) were just a few <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

more interesting species recorded.<br />

I would like to thank all <strong>the</strong> people who helped on this very successful <strong>BSBI</strong> Local Change meeting.<br />

LYNNE FARRELL<br />

MoD RANGE, ABERPORTH. CARDIGANSHIRE (v.c. 46) 9 th August<br />

Twenty five members, as well as eight present and past members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> very active conservation group<br />

on <strong>the</strong> range who accompanied and looked after us, met on an uncomfortably hot day on this shadeless<br />

coastal headland for a clockwise walk encompassing a wide range <strong>of</strong> habitats and most <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> SSSI.<br />

Ungrazed and unploughed since <strong>the</strong> late 1930s, much <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> site has reverted to coastal heath and<br />

species-rich calcareous grassland, managed only by mowing which aims to keep a balance between <strong>the</strong><br />

needs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> abundant nesting skylarks and <strong>the</strong> plant communities. Although a total <strong>of</strong> 417 species and<br />

hybrids had already been recorded on <strong>the</strong> c.1S0 hectare site, we added a fur<strong>the</strong>r ten.<br />

After crossing extensive rank grassland, where we located a colony <strong>of</strong> Ophioglossum vulgatum<br />

(Adder's-tongue), Tony Lewis found Lamium amplexicaule (Henbit Dead-nettle) and L. hybridum<br />

(Cut-leaved Dead-nettle) on a shaley road verge where Vicia lathyroides (Spring Vetch) was also<br />

present (all new for <strong>the</strong> site). We soon reached <strong>the</strong> heath at <strong>the</strong> north-west comer <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> site where<br />

Viola lactea x V. riviniana (a hybrid Dog-violet) was frequent; pure V. lactea (Pale Dog-violet) was<br />

only tentatively identified. A circular flushed area had Salix repens (Creeping Willow), Carex<br />

pulicaris (Flea Sedge), C. hostiana (Tawny Sedge) and Scutellaria minor (Lesser Skullcap), and <strong>the</strong>n<br />

we went down <strong>the</strong> slope to a damp gravelly area where <strong>the</strong>re was a great abundance <strong>of</strong> Anagallis<br />

minima (Chaffweed). Most or all <strong>of</strong> this had only four petals, allowed by Ross-Craig and various<br />

European Floras, but surprisingly not by Stace, CTM or Flora Europaea. After looking at perhaps <strong>the</strong><br />

only native colony <strong>of</strong> Brachypodium pinnatum (Tor-grass) in <strong>the</strong> county, we moved on to <strong>the</strong> top <strong>of</strong><br />

Cribach Bay where Roger Maskew demonstrated Rosa micrantha x R. canina and R. caesia ssp.<br />

caesia x R. canina (both new for <strong>the</strong> site) along with R. micrantha (Small-flowered Sweet-briar),<br />

R. sherardii (Sherard's Downy-rose) and three <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> groups <strong>of</strong> R. canina (Dog-rose). Steve Chambers<br />

and Andy lones found ano<strong>the</strong>r new species nearby, Clinopodium vulgare (Wild Basil).<br />

We thanked especially Chris Shipton and Marleen Edwards for arranging <strong>the</strong> meeting, and<br />

congratulated Marleen on <strong>the</strong> recently completed two-volume Site Dossier which was exhibited and<br />

from which copies <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> species list and botanical map were circulated to participants.<br />

ARTHUR CHATER<br />

ALLERTHORPE COMMON AND POCKLINGTON CANAL HEAD (v.c. 61), 16 th August<br />

Ten people attended this excursion, <strong>the</strong> first in v.c. 61 since 1998. Despite extensive forestation<br />

Allerthorpe Common still <strong>of</strong>fers a rich diversity <strong>of</strong> plants along several rides and tracks and has<br />

perhaps <strong>the</strong> highest concentration <strong>of</strong> notable species in <strong>the</strong> vice-county. An area is fenced <strong>of</strong>f and<br />

maintained as a nature reserve by <strong>the</strong> Yorkshire Wildlife Trust (YWT), and it was in this that we saw<br />

Hypericum elodes (Marsh St lohn's-wort) in its only known East Riding station. The YWT manages<br />

this part <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Common as an open heath by grazing and a small area <strong>of</strong> marsh is now fenced <strong>of</strong>f to<br />

protect this locally rare species. A few metres away, Roger Martin discovered a stand <strong>of</strong> Pteridium<br />

aquilinum ssp. atlanticum (Bracken), a taxon hi<strong>the</strong>rto unrecorded in <strong>the</strong> v.c. *. Tightly curled and hairy<br />

crosiers were evident on each plant at this late summer date whereas plants <strong>of</strong> 'ordinary' bracken were<br />

without crosiers. At one location we counted 20 plants <strong>of</strong> Gnaphalium sylvaticum (Heath Cudweed)<br />

growing toge<strong>the</strong>r with Filago minima (Small Cudweed) and during <strong>the</strong> day three different new<br />

locations were found for Heath Cudweed. This elicited much note-taking and photography during<br />

which time several missed seeing Polygala serpyllifolia (Heath Milkwort), ano<strong>the</strong>r locally scarce plant<br />

and specialist on this site. Searches for Anagallis minima (Chaffweed), Radiola lino ides (Allseed),<br />

Cirsium dissection (Meadow Thistle), Drosera spp. (Sundews) and Pyrola minor (Common


78 Reports <strong>of</strong> Field Meetings / Stop Press<br />

Wintergreen) proved unfruitful. However, Anagallis tenella (Bog Pimpernel), Spergularia rubra<br />

(Sand Spurrey) and Ornithopus perpusillus (Bird's-foot) were found. Lythrum portula (Waterpurslane)<br />

and Persicaria hydropiper (Water-pepper) occurred abundantly in shaded wet wheel ruts.<br />

Apera spica-venti (Loose Silky-bent) has long been known to grow in crops bordering AUerthorpe<br />

Common but none was found on this occasion. However, Agrostis gigantea (Black Bent) was new to<br />

several members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> group. Of frequent comment were <strong>the</strong> observations <strong>of</strong> very small plants <strong>of</strong><br />

Veronica scutellata (Marsh Speedwell) that seemed insistent on survival despite <strong>the</strong> prevailing drought<br />

conditions.<br />

Later, <strong>the</strong> group visited Pocklington Canal Head, a site that has had some reputation for scarce<br />

aquatics and has recently suffered 'amenification'. It proved disappointing on this visit although<br />

flowering Elodea nuttallii (Nuttall's Waterweed) was a new experience for some <strong>of</strong> us. The day ended<br />

on a decidedly sour note with few <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> company able to appreciate <strong>the</strong> subtle plum flavour <strong>of</strong> Prunus<br />

x fruticans relative to Prunus spinosa (Blackthorn).<br />

* A few days later, Dr Eric Chicken made a valiant attempt to find this stand but my directions proved<br />

inaccurate. However, he did find, in <strong>the</strong> same general locality, Molinia caerulea ssp. arundinacea,<br />

which had escaped our notice.<br />

PETER 1. COOK<br />

STOP PRESS<br />

FINE EXAMPLES OF SOME COUNTY FLORAS FOR DISPOSAL<br />

Druce, G.C. The Flora <strong>of</strong> Buckinghamshire. 1926. Map. An exceptional copy, free <strong>of</strong> all defects.<br />

Near MINT - £100<br />

GROSE, D. Flora <strong>of</strong> Wiltshire 1957. 824, maps, photos. Fine -£50<br />

LEE, F.A. The Flora <strong>of</strong> West Yorkshire with a sketch <strong>of</strong> Climatology 1888. VG -£60<br />

PAINTER, W.H. A Contribution to <strong>the</strong> Flora <strong>of</strong> Derbyshire 1889. VG -£40<br />

PRYOR, A.R. A Flora <strong>of</strong> Hertfordshire 1887. Near fine. - £50<br />

SAVAGE, 1.P., V.H. HEYWOOD & V.GORDON Travis's Flora <strong>of</strong> South Lancashire 1963 (Ist ed.), map,<br />

VGlfine - £30<br />

Enquiries for more details to Mrs M.L. Long, Ozarda, Les Hamonnets, St John Jersey JE3 4FP.<br />

Tellfax 01534 862473; email: randmlong@localdial.com><br />

The General Editor Gwynn Ellis can be contacted by phone or fax on 029-2049-6042 or<br />

email: rgellis@ntlworld.com<br />

The Receiving Editor Dr Leander Wolstenholme can be contacted by phone on 0151 4784278 by<br />

fax on 0151478 4350 or emaiI: leander.wolstenholme@liverpoolmuseums.org.uk<br />

All text and illustrations appearing in <strong>BSBI</strong> News and its Supplements are copyright and no<br />

reproduction in any form may be made without written permission from <strong>the</strong> General Editor.<br />

Offers and special terms apply only to members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Society</strong> and copies are not available on an<br />

exchange basis.<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong>News (rSSN 0309-930X) is published by <strong>the</strong> <strong>Botanical</strong> <strong>Society</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong>.<br />

Enquiries concerning <strong>the</strong> <strong>Society</strong>'s activities and membership should be addressed to: The Hon.<br />

General Secretary, clo Dept. <strong>of</strong> Botany, The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London<br />

SW7 5BD. Tel: 01719388701<br />

Camera ready copy produced by Gwynn Ellis and printed by J. & P. Davison, 3 James Place, Treforest,<br />

Pontypridd, Mid Glamorgan CF37 ISQ (Tel. 01443-400585; email: davison-litho@ukf.net)


Contents 79<br />

Continued from back cover<br />

ALIENS (continued)<br />

Is Salvia sclarea declining? ...................................................................... 49<br />

Euonymus japonicus - how fast is it decreasing? .................................................... 49<br />

Three Sedum escapes in England and Scotland .................................................... 51-52<br />

Sedum kimnachii in Kent ..................................................................... 51<br />

Phedimus stoloni{erus (Sedum stoloniferum) naturalised in Scotland .................................. 52<br />

Sedum brevi{olium - ano<strong>the</strong>r escape in Scotland ................................................. 52<br />

Trifolium stellatum in Hampshire .................................................................. 52<br />

A Hybrid Mallow with Garden Potential ............................................................ 54<br />

NOTICES (<strong>BSBI</strong>) ................................................................................. 57<br />

Picas de Europa ................................................................................ 57<br />

NOTICES (Non-<strong>BSBI</strong>) .......................................................................... 57-61<br />

Flora Locale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 57<br />

Plant Evolution in Mediterranean Climate Zones ..................................................... 58<br />

Plant Identification Courses ...................................................................... 58<br />

Wild flowers and <strong>the</strong>ir identification ............................................................... 58<br />

Taxonomists: your National Focal Point Needs You for Services to Biodiversity Conservation ................. 59<br />

Hemiparasites Symposium ....................................................................... 59<br />

Insect-Plant Interactions: From Parasitism to Mutualism ............................................... 59<br />

Explaining species abundance distributions: Biodiversity over time ....................................... 60<br />

World Wetlands Day Conference .................................................................. 60<br />

REQUESTS ................................................................................... 61-62<br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> English Editor required for Willows <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Urals ............................................. 61<br />

Photographs <strong>of</strong> <strong>British</strong> plants ..................................................................... 61<br />

Erophila ...................................................................................... 62<br />

OFFERS ...................................................................................... 62-64<br />

New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora for sale ....................................................... 62<br />

Free botanical publications from National Museums & Galleries on Vales ................................. 62<br />

Seeds from Ware - 2003 ........................................................................ 63<br />

G<strong>of</strong>ynne Seed List 2004 ......................................................................... 63<br />

BOOK NOTES ................................................................................. 64-66<br />

Supplement to Alien Grasses <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> <strong>Isles</strong> ...................................................... 64<br />

Catalogue <strong>of</strong> <strong>Botanical</strong> Prints and Drawings at <strong>the</strong> National Museums & Galleries <strong>of</strong> Wales .................. 65<br />

A Flora <strong>of</strong> Cumbria: Corrigenda .................................................................. 65<br />

Fritillary ..................................................................................... 65<br />

'Dating one's Bentham' reprieved ................................................................. 66<br />

OBITUARY NOTES ............................................................................ 66-68<br />

Dr F.H. Perring ................................................................................ 66<br />

Mr R.H. Roberts ............................................................................... 67<br />

Mr PJ. Selby ................................................................................ 67<br />

Mr F.W. Simpson .............................................................................. 68<br />

Erophila verna seedlings ............................................................................ 68<br />

REPORTS OF FIELD MEETINGS -2003 ......................................................... 69-78<br />

Castell Dinas Bran, LIangollen, Denbighshire (v.c. 50) 3rd May ......................................... 69<br />

Murlough, Co. Down (v.c. H38) 18th May .......................................................... 70<br />

Uskmouth Wetlands Reserve (v.c. 35) 5th July ....................................................... 70<br />

Lockerbie.Dumfriesshire (v.c.72) 18th-20th July ..................................................... 71<br />

Carmar<strong>the</strong>nshire Recording Meeting (v.c.44) 26th July - 2nd August ..................................... 73<br />

Ben More, Mull (v.c. 103) 30th July - I st August .................................................... 76<br />

MoD Range, Aberporth, Cardiganshire (v.c. 46) 9th August ............................................ 77<br />

Allerthorpe Common and Pocklington Canal Head (v.c. 61), 16th August ................................. 77<br />

STOP PRESS ..................................................................................... 78<br />

Fine examples <strong>of</strong> some County Floras for disposal .................................................... 78


CONTENTS<br />

ADMINISTRATION and IMPORTANT ADDRESSES .................................................... 2<br />

Deadline for contributions for <strong>BSBI</strong> News 96 ......................................................... 2<br />

ADVERTISEMENT ................................................................................ 3<br />

IMPORTANT NOTICES ............................................................................. 4<br />

From <strong>the</strong> President .............................................................................. 4<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> Development Fund Appeal ................................................................... 5<br />

New <strong>BSBI</strong> postcards ............................................................................. 5<br />

DIARy ........................................................................................... 5<br />

EDITORIAL ....................................................................................... 6<br />

Congratulations: ................................................................................. 6<br />

Colour section .................................................................................. 6<br />

New Atlas <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>British</strong> & Irish Flora ............................................................... 6<br />

Vice-county Census Catalogue ..................................................................... 6<br />

Members email addresses ......................................................................... 6<br />

Field Studies Council ............................................................................ 7<br />

And finally: .................................................................................... 7<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> VOLUNTEERS OFFICER ...................................................................... 7<br />

By way <strong>of</strong> introduction. .. ........................................................................ 7<br />

<strong>BSBI</strong> Local Change . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7<br />

CO-ORDINATOR'S CORNER ...................................................................... 8-9<br />

Countryside matters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8<br />

Conservation battlegrounds .................................................................... : . .. 8<br />

Threatened Plants Database ....................................................................... 9<br />

RECORDERS AND RECORDING ................................................................. 9-12<br />

Panel <strong>of</strong> Referees and Specialists ................................................................... 9<br />

Panel <strong>of</strong> Vice-county Recorders ................................................................... 10<br />

Plant Records for Walsonia and <strong>the</strong> Vice-County Census Catalogue ...................................... 10<br />

Beyond Trainspotting ........................................................................... II<br />

Solution to Crossword No. 4 ...................................................................... 12<br />

NOTES AND ARTICLES ........................................................................ 12-34<br />

The enigma <strong>of</strong><strong>the</strong> alien hea<strong>the</strong>rs <strong>of</strong> Britain, especially Erica xdarleyensis ................................. 12<br />

Floral Abberations .............................................................................. 14<br />

Drought resistant Ranunculus ficaria? .............................................................. 14<br />

A singularly double form <strong>of</strong> Card amine pralensis ..................................................... 14<br />

Coastal Elylrigia species and hybrids in north-western England and nor<strong>the</strong>rn Wales ......................... 15<br />

Plants at <strong>the</strong> edge - <strong>the</strong> sou<strong>the</strong>rn limit <strong>of</strong> Erigeron borealis ............................................. 19<br />

What lies across <strong>the</strong> channel? ..................................................................... 21<br />

A key to Bromeae in <strong>the</strong> Mediterranean climatic zones <strong>of</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Europe, South West Asia, and North Africa 22-26<br />

The Fen Nettle, Urtica galeopsifolia, in Staffordshire .................................................. 27<br />

Scrophularia scorodonia (Scrophulariaceae): Native in South Hampshire? ................................. 28<br />

Geranium purpureum sUbspecies .................................................................. 29<br />

Bee Orchid (Ophrys apifera) in Ayrshire (v.c. 75) .................................................... 30<br />

Cleavers: size, seedlings & frost resistance .......................................................... 30<br />

Lemna minula V: root caps and root chloroplasts ..................................................... 31<br />

Carex muricata ssp. muricata in sou<strong>the</strong>rn England .................................................... 32<br />

Botany (Talking flowers) in literature .............................................................. 33<br />

<strong>Botanical</strong> Crossword No 4 ........................................................................... 35<br />

Sambucus niger seedlings ........................................................................... 35<br />

CONSERVATION NEWS & VIEWS .............................................................. 36-44<br />

New plant status lists for Great Britain .............................................................. 36<br />

Gnaphalium luteoalbum needs no special protection .................................................. 43<br />

Carex vulpina and biodiversity action plans ......................................................... 44<br />

Sanguisorba minor seedlings ......................................................................... 44<br />

ALIENS ...................................................................................... 45-57<br />

Akebia quinala (Houtt.) Decne. (Lardizabalaceae) new to West Kent and spreading? ........................ 45<br />

Ano<strong>the</strong>r lawn Lobelia: Pratia pedunculata .......................................................... 46<br />

Distinguishing Lonicera nilida and L. pileata ........................................................ 48<br />

Echinochloa crus-galli and major roads ............................................................. 48<br />

Continued on inside back cover<br />

11

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