Thursday 23 January 2020

Atlas 2020, c'est tout finis


As you may have noticed, we are no longer in 2019, meaning that my favourite blog post topic, the BSBI's Atlas 2020 project, is finished. I have been meaning to write something to mark the occasion and celebrate everyone's hard work, but appallingly have been preoccupied with bryology and numerous other things this winter. However, I currently find myself becalmed in an Essex hotel, so here are some concluding thoughts on Atlas 2020 in VC23.

First, it has a been a great pleasure to receive everyone's records over the last three and a bit years. Seeing what local botanists have been up to has been very interesting and enjoyable, particularly being able to share in the excitement of unusual discoveries. I have had records from a relatively small number of regular contributors, either individuals or group recorders, some of whom have produced a considerable volume of records, as well as less frequent recorders. Many of the records that have come through me have been by email, but over the summer of last year the BSBI Distribution Database made friends with the iRecord database which gave me access to the 12,000 or so records from that source. Many of the iRecord records have been collected by a greater diversity of people than belong to the quite small circle of botanists associated with our local flora groups and the BSBI.

It is invidious of me to mention names, but special thanks must go to Tim Harrison, Jonathan Shanklin and Pete Stroh, none of whom live in the county (Jonathan and Pete live as far away as Cambridge and Peterborough, respectively) but who nevertheless spent a lot of time thoroughly surveying under-recorded areas of VC23. From the locals, we have also had regular and significant contributions from Sally Abbey, Fay Banks, Nick Barber, Brenda Betteridge, Susan Erskine, Renée Grayer, Sue Helm, Roger Heath-Brown, Frank Hunt, Clare Malonelee, Oli Pescott, Sally Rankin, Ruth Ripley, Barbara Spence and Frances Watkins. Judy Webb has been very helpful in sending me lists from her prodigious site monitoring work. Of course, as described in a previous blog, a huge contribution to the county's vascular plant data holding comes to me via my data sharing agreement with TVERC. I am very grateful to their data officer Ellen Lee for organising this, as well as to the many recorders who submit their records to TVERC, whom I am sure would be pleased to know that their records contribute to national recording projects like Atlas 2020.


Atlas records per year, excluding duplicates. Red lines are yearly number of records, on the left vertical axis, and blue lines the cumulative total, on the right. Solid and dashed lines are numbers of records with and without TVERC records.
Overall, the records gathered between 1st January 2000 and 31st December 2019 number a little over 320,800 (excluding duplicates). You can see how the records were accumulated in the graph to the left. This total is similar to most other English vice counties, being a little more than the median (~305,200) and less than the mean (~336,100). I have verified all of the Atlas records for VC23, confirming about 330,000 records (including duplicates). Questions marks remain over around 1,200, but thank you if you helped me resolve any queries.

I have shown the split between records from TVERC and other sources to highlight the importance of our data sharing agreement, which makes up more than half of the total records for Atlas 2020. This agreement with TVERC has provided a steady stream of records each year, particularly from important privately owned Local Wildlife Sites, contrasting with the more stop-start contributions direct to the BSBI. What is evident from the graph is the late start to systematic recording of the county for the Atlas project, which began I believe when Sue Helm took on the county recorder job and Atlas recording meetings were first organised. Many thanks to Sue for her hard work during her three year tenure as recorder. The spikes and troughs in the later Atlas period reflect the comings and goings of the non-VC23 based botanists thanked above.


In terms of spatial coverage and success, the county can be pleased with its Atlas dataset. This is summarised in the series of maps shown, which are stills from my interactive Atlas webmap. The project was never supposed to be a complete survey of every tetrad (2km square) in the county, but a repeat of previous hectad (10km square) national atlas surveys, based on a sample of tetrads. The re-recording rate (the coloured proportion of grid squares in the maps) is the crucial statistic for measuring progress — while there have definitely been changes to our flora, most species will still be present in most squares, so the higher the re-recording rate the more thorough and representative the sample is. The BSBI advised that a hectad re-recording rate of 70-80% should be aimed for, and this has been met for many hectads, and just about all compared to the recording period for the New Atlas (1987-1999). On the other hand, since we have no way of measuring abundance, records from too thorough a search might belie real declines, with for instance a formerly common plant reduced to a single plant both registering as present in the Atlas.

The above picture is somewhat complicated by recording effort over different periods and across taxa. The most intensive and extensive period of recording in the county was for the 1997 flora of John Killick et al, recording for which was largely complete by the late 1980s. In contrast, the New Atlas period saw less intensive recording than for the flora and the current atlas project. The difference between native and alien plants also obscures the picture, as many aliens are casual or sporadically recorded. This is well illustrated by the hectad with the city of Oxford (SP50), which has historic records of very many alien taxa from the city's old tips and waste ground. I will let the boffins at BSBI and CEH ponder how to deal with all these complications!

Drilling down to a scale more relevant to local recording, the tetrad coverage was good, indicated by the distribution, colour and size of the tetrad squares in the map shown. There were some solidly recorded areas, especially in the centre of the county, with effort thinning out to the south-east and north-west. Tim Harrison was a great help in improving several hectads in the south-east. The good results for the centre of the county doubtless reflect the very rich and varied sites around Oxford, but some recorder bias is clear, these sites also being much more accessible than in more remote areas (many are nature reserves) and this is where most of the botanists live. This includes myself, and Islip where I live (SP51H) stands out as among the most species-rich tetrads in SP51 together with the unimproved part of Otmoor (SP51R). In fact, Islip is fairly unexceptional compared with most of the nearby parishes (although there are two rivers) and many of the species I have recorded are garden escapes.

Summary of Atlas 2020 results in VC23, by hectads (top) and tetrads (bottom). The colour of grid squares is the number of species recorded (as shown in the legends), and the proportion of the coloured area is the proportion of species re-recorded from the comparison period (i.e. 1987-1999 or pre-2000). The tetrad map compares atlas records to all pre-2000 records.

After having worked so hard on Atlas, I am sure like me you are ready and rearing to start the next project. The BSBI has not yet announced the projects the society will work on over the coming years. However, it is likely that it will be something more ecology or conservation focused than Atlas 2020, for instance habitat surveys or developing site lists and registers. Myself, I'd like to direct some focus on data deficient taxa, but will be continuing the tetrad recording. The meetings I will be running this year will combine elements of these and less intense training sessions. I've already put dates in the calendar for this season — if you'd like to join me and are not already on my mailing list then do get in touch.

Monday 6 January 2020

Bletchingdon Bryophytes

For our third recording trip of the season, after two consecutive trips to nature reserves, we decided to focus on the wider countryside, plumping for the village of Bletchingdon. A picturesque village in northern Oxfordshire built around a large green, adjacent to a grand manor house in a Palladian style. The village is adajcent to the Oolitic cornbrash limestone bedrock, and as such we expected good hunting for bryophytes on the many limestone walls of the village. Indeed, although mainly intending to focus on SP5018, we spent some time after arriving inspecting a fine wall along the road from the village green to the church. The wall had the fruiting feather (pleurocarpous) moss Homalothecium sericeum above fine and extensive sheets of Porella platyphylla, a liverwort that you may recall from our last trip to Watlington Hill. The wall also yielded Syntrichia virescens, among others; David picked this out from amongst the more abundant, larger, Syntrichia montana. A later check under the microscope proved him right! This is a probably under-recorded species, only recognised as British in 1959. The 1998 Flora of Oxfordshire hedged its bets by labelling it "?rare".

Fine sheets of Porella platyphylla in the morning sun.
Fine sheets of Porella platyphylla in the morning sun.

Homalothecium sericeum in fruit at Bletchingdon.
Homalothecium sericeum in fruit at Bletchingdon.
Hurrying on from the delights of this wall (we were in fact late to our official rendezvous point!), we then focused on the churchyard of St Giles for an hour or so. This included a range of graves of different stone, aspect, angle, and shadedness, resulting in a pretty good list. The highlight of the limestone headstones being some small patches of Tortella tortuosa. A notable near miss was an infertile Aloina species from the churchyard path; sadly these little acrocarps are unidentifable (at least without molecular techniques!) from infertile material, so this record remains at the genus level. Interestingly, Aloina ambigua was recorded from Bletchingdon stone pit in 1945. The full list from the churchyard was as follows:
Aloina sp. Orthotrichum affine
Barbula convoluta var. convoluta Orthotrichum anomalum
Barbula convoluta var. sardoa Oxyrrhynchium hians
Barbula unguiculata Phascum cuspidatum
Brachythecium rutabulum Plagiomnium undulatum
Bryum argenteum Pseudocrossidium hornschuchianum
Bryum capillare Pseudoscleropodium purum
Ceratodon purpureus Rhynchostegiella tenella
Dicranella varia Rhynchostegium confertum
Didymodon fallax Rhynchostegium murale
Didymodon insulanus Rhytidiadelphus squarrosus
Didymodon sinuosus Schistidium apocarpum s.l.
Grimmia pulvinata Thamnobryum alopecurum
Homalothecium sericeum Tortella tortuosa
Hypnum cupressiforme Tortula muralis
Hypnum cupressiforme var. resupinatum Zygodon viridissimus var. viridissimus
Kindbergia praelonga Metzgeria furcata
Porella platyphylla

The rest of the day was spent exploring SP5018, taking in a circular walk around the parkland of Bletchingdon manor, ultimately heading back into the village along the Kirtlington road. Overall we put a together a long list for the day, including Neckera complanata and more Porella together on a large ash stool, Oxyrrhynchium speciosum on the edge of a small stream in woodland, and Syntrichia papillosa on another large ash tree. On the way back to the village a stubble field was also worked over, although this yielded a fairly typical assemblage of Barbula unguiculata, Phascum cuspidatum, Oxyrrhynchium hians, and the tuberous Bryum, B. klinggraeffii. Both assemblages of fields in the calcareous parts of south-east Britain (see Preston et al., 2010 [complete the "captcha" image text to access the paper]).

Neckera complanata growing on a wall with H. sericeum at Bletchingon Park
Finally, arriving back into Bletchingdon, we spent some time grubbing around for urban ruderal species, adding Brachythecium albicans and Tortula modica from some unusually sandy soil behind kerbstones, followed by the classic wet tarmac species Didymodon nicholsonii, Ceratodon purpureus, Bryum dichotomum and Orthotrichum anomalum from a playground. A pre-Christmas pint soon followed! The full list from the wider 1km square was as follows:

Amblystegium serpens Grimmia pulvinata Rhynchostegium confertum
Barbula unguiculata Homalothecium sericeum Syntrichia laevipila
Brachythecium albicans Hypnum cupressiforme Syntrichia montana
Brachythecium rutabulum Hypnum cupressiforme var. cupressiforme Syntrichia papillosa
Bryum argenteum Hypnum cupressiforme var. resupinatum Syntrichia ruralis var. ruralis
Bryum capillare Isothecium myosuroides Thamnobryum alopecurum
Bryum dichotomum Kindbergia praelonga Tortula modica
Bryum klinggraeffii Leskea polycarpa Tortula muralis
Bryum moravicum Neckera complanata Tortula truncata
Ceratodon purpureus Orthotrichum affine Ulota bruchii
Cryphaea heteromalla Orthotrichum anomalum Zygodon conoideus
Didymodon insulanus Orthotrichum diaphanum Frullania dilatata
Didymodon nicholsonii Orthotrichum lyellii Lophocolea bidentata
Didymodon sinuosus Oxyrrhynchium hians Metzgeria furcata
Didymodon vinealis Oxyrrhynchium speciosum Porella platyphylla
Fissidens incurvus Phascum cuspidatum Radula complanata
Fissidens taxifolius Platyhypnidium riparioides

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