Saturday, 8 June 2019

Broughton Casttle


The first meeting of June and the fifth of the season was held last weekend at Broughton Castle near Banbury. This site had been recorded previously for Atlas 2020 but we had special permission to botanise the whole park and therefore hoped to refind some of the plants historically recorded but not seen since 2000.

I had particularly hoped that we might find some of the nice aquatic plants that had been recorded from the Castle Moat. As it turned out the moat was a brown soup with very few macrophytes, an unpleasant appearance completed by floating dead freshwater mussels. The Sor Brook was no better, sporting also the invasive non-native aquatic plant
Egeria densa
, the first reported sighting of this plant in Oxon for 35 years. Tributaries of the Sor Brook had some other infamous beasties, with
Fallopia sachalinensis
(giant knotweed) and its giant handkerchief-like leaves and
Heracleum mantegazzianum
(giant hogweed). On a positive, we did find quite a lot of
Ranunculus fluitans
(river watercrowfoot), which was good to see.

Elsewhere in the park plant diversity was quite limited. There was a decent stand of calcareous grassland with plants like
Cirsium acaule
(dwarf thistle),
Koeleria macrantha
(crested hair-grass) and
Helianthemum nummularium
(common rock-rose), but these had all been recorded previously. In all we managed to find about 250 taxa, bumping up the tetrad total to 338 from 252. Not the enormous haul of records of previous meetings, but eminently respectable and goes to show that even in well-recorded tetrads there is always more to find.

Interesting things have been turning up elsewhere in the county this spring. I was contacted independently by Frank Hunt and Andrew Lack after they both found a new population of
Scandix pecten-veneris
(shepherd's-needle) near Sandhills, north-east of Oxford. Frank also found a new population of
Montia fontana
(blinks), surprisingly at the well-botanised North Leigh Common. This time of year always produces some sore heads when the marsh orchids come out, and surveying a meadow in the VC 22 part of modern Oxfordshire Judy Webb and I found what with the help of BSBI Dactylorhiza referee Ian Denholm we determined as a swarm of
D. maculata
(heath spotted orchid),
D. praetermissa
(southern marsh orchid) and their hybrid D. x hallii. The latter was new to VC 22 and the modern county.

Botanising less obviously delightful places for Atlas 2020 near Adderbury, I found
Viola tricolor
(wild pansy) and, along the Oxford Canal,
Lepidium heterophyllum
(Smith's pepperwort). According to the Flora of Oxfordshire the latter has not been seen in the vice county since 1983! Not far away was possible Galium parisiense (wall bedstraw), but I want to check the fruits to be sure. This has not been seen in Oxon before, but was recently found new to Northants (VC 32), in the VC 32 part of Banbury and elsewhere.

The excellent Oxfordshire's Threatened Plants published last year reported that the small annual
Minuartia hybrida
(fine-leaved sandwort) had gone the way of many such plants and was extinct in Oxon. Fortunately not so, as the population known historically from the old chalk pit in Chinnor is still there, found by Paul Stanley back in 2013 and also seen by Oli Pescott, David Roy and myself while recording around Chinnor. The old pit has many other interesting plants, so do go and see this little delight while it is still out.

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