Wednesday 14 November 2018

Slim pickings in the Vale

Parts of the Vale are still chronically under-recorded for bryophytes. The latest VC41 tetrad map shows a particularly bad white hole in SS97 and ST07:


Looking at the OS maps and aerial photos for some of these unrecorded tetrads it became obvious why no bryologists had bothered to record there - a mix of improved grassland and large arable fields, with a few lanes passing through and a distinct lack of woodland. Challenging territory indeed, but feeling rusty after the summer hiatus it seemed a good place to kick off the bryophyte recording season when I had a day off work last week. Not too many species to tax my brain.

I visited three tetrads on a day of sunshine and showers, with some lengthy downpours meaning time was lost while sheltering in the car. I started off at Llysworney, which had a bit more habitat variety than some of the other areas thanks to the village streets and walls, and Worney Wood - a new wood planted by the Woodland Trust. The woodland would presumably have been a couple of boring rye grass fields until it was planted a few years ago. Now it supports young trees quite rich in epiphytes, though with nothing of note except for some Porella platyphylla and Didymodon sinuosus on an old field boundary Ash. Tetrad SS97S has now moved along from 3 to 37 bryophyte species.

Much of the day was spent walking the lanes and footpaths in SS97R, which at least succeeded in putting this tetrad on the bryological map with 49 taxa recorded. It was a bit of s struggle though. The arable fields had been recently sown with winter cereals, but a sample collected from a small area of unploughed margin produced three tuberous Bryum species: B. rubens (large knobbly red tubers), B. ruderale (large tubers & papillose violet rhizoids) and B. violaceum (smaller tubers & smooth violet rhizoids - photo below).

To end the day there was time for a brief stop at Llanmihangel churchyard before the heavens opened again. This small churchyard, tucked into a valley bottom, proved to be the nicest spot of the day, and produced a few species not seen at the earlier sites: Cirriphyllum crassinervium, Lophocolea bidentata, Thuidium tamariscinum and Plagiochila asplenioides (the latter growing on a stone grave). SS97V was another tetrad that hadn't been recorded previously, so all 20 species were new.

A feature of the day was the abundance of Anomodon viticulosus on laneside walls and a few hedgerow tree bases. This species is proving frequent in the lime-rich Vale and I look forward to putting more dots on the map on future visits.

I enjoyed the day despite making only 128 bryophyte records and failing to take any tetrads past the 60 mark. No doubt a spring visit would add a few more Orthotrichum, Ulota, etc, but is it worth the effort? I think the time would probably be better spent elsewhere.

4 comments:

  1. I find square bashing species-poor squares rewarding as it's more of a challenge!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I agree! You need to pull out all the tricks to get to a decent total - checking tarmac and bits of rubble, finding small streams/ditches, checking hedgerow bushes carefully. I still need to hone my skills at this!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Your day sounds a lot like my Saturday morning - doing 1.5 tetrads in central VC35. It's peculiarly satisfying!

    I'm glad you're both back into bryos after the summer. I knocked off another tetrad in NW VC35 on my way back from fieldwork today. Just 82 to go...

    ReplyDelete