Although there are people looking at bryophytes in
Oxfordshire and Berkshire, it has been a little while since any records were
committed to the British Bryological Society’s database, and we (Oli Pescott,
David Morris) have been trying to rectify this with occasional winter
excursions. Last weekend we focused on on Godstow Nunnery and surrounds
(v.c. 23, Oxfordshire), but with a brief look at Port Meadow to the east of the
Thames at the end of the day. (We were almost entirely
within SP40Z
for the whole day). Surprisingly, there is only one record named in the BBS database
as being from Godstow, a record of Syntrichia
latifolia from 1951, although it must be the case that some of the older,
hectad ‘mastercard’-type records from SP40 in the database would have been made
there. The length of old walls at Godstow makes it unlikely that Oxford
bryologists of yesteryear would have failed to visit it. Godstow is also a
prime spot for list-makers, being one of the few established populations of Aristolochia clematitis (Birthwort) in
Britain, making it doubly odd that no-one has made a clearly localised list of
bryophytes there that has made it into the BBS database.
Godstow Abbey ruins © Copyright Chris Gunns and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. |
Post-lunch, we briefly examined some tarmac on the wrong
side of Godstow Lock, adding a number of what the eminent bryologist Des
Callaghan has been known to refer to as “townland treasures” (as opposed to the
more frequently heard “grots”), before being asked to sling our hook by the
lock keeper, and this wasn’t an invitation to sample a different hobby whilst
water-side. The most interesting addition from the tarmac was Didymodon nicholsonii. Further south in
a strip of mixed deciduous woodland (with an impressively large Field Maple), we added a small selection
of epiphytes, including Syntrichia
papillosa on Oak, S. latifolia (the
one species previously localised from the area) on felled Salix, and a few more liverworts such as Metzgeria consanguinea, M.
furcata, and Frullania dilatata. Investigations
of Zygodon tufts at home later on
revealed Z. conoideus and Z. viridissimus. These are species that
are, by and large, quickly distinguished by dislodging gemmae from the leaves onto
a slide; if you have a stereomicroscope but no compound microscope, the gemmae
can even be distinguished at x40 on a white background (although one could miss rarer species in this fashion).
Given that we were in the area, we decided to investigate a
couple of spots on Port Meadow before heading home. This turned up the tuberous
Bryum, B. klinggraeffii, from fine sand and gravel on a bend of the
Thames. Sometimes called the Raspberry Bryum, the tubers on this species’
rhizoids are dark red and have large, protuberant cells; unlike some plants,
the Raspberry Bryum is well-named, and the eye-of-faith needn’t enter into it.
Although frequently recorded from Berkshire over the past 30 or so years, this
is a species that has only very rarely been found in Oxfordshire, although
how much of this is due to a lack of habitat, and how much is due to
under-recording, it is hard to say. Further south, in the area of low-lying
land in Port Meadow that regularly floods in winter, the mud of the draw-down
zone yielded more B. klinggraeffii,
and, on returning home, Aphanorrhegma
(Physcomitriella) patens was discovered on the edge of a clump of the former species. Again, this is
probably somewhat under-recorded, but according to BBS data at least, has not
been recorded for the vice-county since the 1980s. (Although it was seen
nearby on a track by Wytham Wood in v.c. 22 by Chris Preston in 2007). The
draw-down zone of Port Meadow might repay further investigation, as, with its
use by geese and other birds, it could be the sort of place that one could turn
up Ephemerum cohaerens, a nationally
rare moss that occurs in similar habitats, and may be moved around by migrating bird life.
Syntrichia papillosa By Des_Callaghan (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0] |
Liverworts
|
Barbula
convoluta var.
sardoa
|
Zygodon
viridissimus var.
viridissimus
|
Platyhypnidium
riparioides
|
Lunularia
cruciata
|
Barbula
unguiculata
|
Zygodon
conoideus var.
conoideus
|
Rhynchostegium
murale
|
Metzgeria
consanguinea
|
Didymodon
nicholsonii
|
Orthotrichum
affine
|
Rhynchostegium
confertum
|
Metzgeria
furcata
|
Didymodon
vinealis
|
Orthotrichum
anomalum
|
Rhynchostegiella
tenella
|
Porella
platyphylla
|
Didymodon
insulanus
|
Orthotrichum
cupulatum
|
Oxyrrhynchium
hians
|
Frullania
dilatata
|
Didymodon
luridus
|
Orthotrichum
diaphanum
|
Kindbergia
praelonga
|
Mosses
|
Didymodon
sinuosus
|
Ulota
crispa s.l.
|
Brachythecium
rutabulum
|
Aphanorrhegma
patens
|
Tortula
muralis
|
Bryum
capillare
|
Homalothecium
sericeum
|
Schistidium
apocarpum s.l.
|
Phascum
cuspidatum
|
Bryum
argenteum
|
Calliergonella
cuspidata
|
Grimmia
pulvinata
|
Syntrichia
ruralis
var. ruralis
|
Bryum
radiculosum
|
Hypnum
cupressiforme var.
cupressiforme
|
Fissidens
taxifolius
|
Syntrichia
montana
|
Bryum
klinggraeffii
|
Cryphaea
heteromalla
|
Ceratodon
purpureus
|
Syntrichia
papillosa
|
Cratoneuron
filicinum
|
Neckera
complanata
|
Pseudocrossidium
hornschuchianum
|
Syntrichia
latifolia
|
Amblystegium
serpens
|
Thamnobryum
alopecurum
|
Pseudocrossidium
revolutum
|
Cinclidotus
fontinaloides
|
Leskea
polycarpa
|
Anomodon
viticulosus
|
No comments:
Post a Comment