Tuesday, 27 November 2018

The benefits of SMNR

 

I have spent the last two days attending a course on Sustainable Management of Natural Resources (SMNR) with some NRW colleagues at Beechwood House in Newport. This venue is in the middle of a large and varied Victorian park in ST38J - a completely un-recorded tetrad for bryophytes. Searching during two half hour lunchbreaks revealed a remarkable diversity of mosses and liverworts in Beechwood Park: 74 species!  Highlight was a patch of Platygyrium repens on a Sycamore, new for Newport county and the southern half of VC35.  Epipterygium tozeri was also new for Newport, I think, but has 30 widely scattered previous VC35 records.  Other species of vague note included Syntrichia virescens on a Lime trunk, Scleropodium cespitans on tarmac, Gyroweisia tenuis on a damp wall, Didymodon vinealis on drier walls, Microlejeunea ulicina on a Holly (2nd Newport record), Riccia glauca on a bank, and Fissidens crassipes, Rhizomnium punctatum and Pellia epiphylla in the stream valley.  I still haven't explored the nearby St Julian's Park, which looks to have even more diverse habitats.

4 comments:

  1. Glad you got something out of it! I am going on the one at Parc Slip next week, I shall try and make it as worthwhile! Karen

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  2. Some lovely records there Sam. Do you have grid refs for the Pla.rep. & Syn.vir.? Will def call in there when the opportunity arises - I presume there's public access?

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  3. No Grid Refs I'm afraid. Both were by the main path that runs up through the middle of the park. The photos show the Platygyrium tree, which is a youngish Sycamore, and the Syntrichia was at the base of one of the mature Limes near the centre of the park (rather than the ones above the house).

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  4. Platygerium looks as if it is very slowly edging its way westwards. How long before it turns up in Glamorgan I wonder?

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