I was particularly hoping to relocate two calcicoles recorded by Barry which I'd never seen: Scorpiurium circinatum and Didymodon umbrosus.
The Scorpiurium proved easy to find and was fairly frequent around the base of the cathedral walls on the northern, southern and eastern aspects. It also occurred on some low walls nearby, as in the pic below.
Scorpiurium circinatum |
The Didymodon was a different matter - I thought I'd failed to find it, but on checking my samples at home I did find a couple of tiny stems which could, perhaps, be this species - see photos below. It looks fairly similar to Barry's photo from 2013, but it seems to lack the basal hyaline cells mentioned in Smith so I think it must be something else (not just a wretched Schistidium I hope!).
The cathedral walls also added two species for the tetrad: Tortella tortuosa and Pseudocrossidium revolutum.
I then had a look at the graveyard, which added eight more species for the tetrad including Cirriphyllum piliferum, Didymodon tophaceus, Brachythecium populeum and Homalothecium lutescens.
Llandaff cathedral graveyard |
Grave supporting Zygodon conoideus |
Zygodon conoideus on gravestone, mixed with Frullania dilatata |
George, from what I remember that looks different to the material I collected. I'll dig out my pictures and post any that might help when I get a chance - did you collect it from the same spot I saw it?
ReplyDeletePS. Well done on your additions, Pseudo.rev. in particular.
ReplyDeleteAnd no, I don't recall ever seeing conoideus on rock!
Takes the tetrad total to about 82 species - just a little way short of Sam's 217 species in his Dingestow tetrad :-)
ReplyDeleteThere are three species in your database for ST17P which have the wrong grid ref associated with them - these are the 1950 Wade records from "Radyr Quarry". The grid ref is listed as ST149796, which is in Llandaff North and away from any quarry. Looking at old OS maps the real Radyr Quarry straddled two tetrads (typical!), but was centred on ST140794 which might be the best grid ref to use for the records.
Thanks George - grid ref corrected.
ReplyDeleteI think I have seen Z conoideus on rock a couple of times, but it is far from typical.
ReplyDeleteThe Schistidium looks plausible as apocarpum. As it has capsules you should be able to ID conclusively by looking at the exothecial cells under the microscope - all long & narrow in crassipilum vs mostly rather short and broad in apocarpum.
Thanks Sam. I've now checked the exothecial cells and it is conclusively crassipilum.
ReplyDelete