Thursday 31 October 2019

Lundy Bryophytes 2019

I made my 6th visit to Lundy Island, off the north coast of Devon, between 19th and 22nd October 2019. Unlike previous visits with family, this was a solo trip aimed at bryophyte recording, albeit armed with binoculars for a bit of birding too. I planned to record the island on a 200x200m grid: a justifiable scale on this 4x1km island. Prior to my visit the Lundy bryophyte list stood at 176 taxa, and 23 addition in October 2019 have raised this to 199 taxa. Bryophytes are fascinatingly varied on Lundy, with oceanic species in stream gullies, ruderal species around the village, and wetland species in parts of the island plateau. Some bryophytes are remarkably rare compared with the mainland, especially woodland taxa such as Atrichum undulatum (added in 2019) and Eurhynchium striatum (still unrecorded), whilst others are notably more frequent, including Campylopus brevipilus and Cephalozia lunulifolia. Brief notes on my 4 days recording follow, with * indicating new taxa for Lundy and bold indicating photographed species.


19th October 2019
Wet days preceded my arrival, so mosses on the concrete wall alongside the road in Landing Bay were much showier than during previous summer visits: Syntrichia ruraliformis* and Cryphaea heteromalla were newly detected on a wall that I have checked several times previously. Quarter Wall Copse was my first target site, and the rocky stream here produced updates for Chiloscyphus polyanthos, Calypogeia muelleriana and Lejeunea lamacerina (20th century records only) as well as Epipterygium tozeri, Fissidens curnovii, Atrichum undulatum* and Sciuro-hypnum populeum*. Searching around the quarries revealed Racomitrium lanuginosum (an update), Barbilophozia attenuata, several colonies of Dicranum scottianum and some Bryum bornholmense* as well as a Yellow-browed Warbler. Brachythecium mildeanum* on concrete in the farmyard had eluded me on previous visits, whilst a quick look in St John's Valley produced potential Scapania lingulata and Tortula wilsonii on thin soil overlying rock, both of which need confirmation by the national recorders.

20th October 2019
Confusion over the time of sunrise saw me waiting for dawn at Threequarter Wall at 07:20. A stream valley by Threequarter Wall detained me for a while before I reached my principal target area. Aneura pinguis was a nice update, and was represented by a large, loosely attached taxon typical of upland flushes, whilst Pellia neesiana* was the first of three records of this species. A large, irregularly-branched Isothecium on a cliff base appears to be I. interludens (I. myosuroides var. brachythecioides), which will be new for SW England if confirmed. The tors and Carex paniculata tussocks of Gannets' Coombe were a rich hunting ground and occupied me for most of the morning. Highlights included Blasia pusilla*, Frullania teneriffae, Hookeria lucens, Scapania scandica*, Sphagnum fimbriatum*, Anthoceros punctatus, Kurzia sylvatica and Tritomaria exsectiformis; the population of Lepidozia cupressina discovered in 2016 was found to extend into six 10m Grid Squares. Crossing to the west coast past several colonies of Campylopus brevipilus took me to a gully east of St Peter's Stone, where Platyhypnidium alopecuroides* was one of the most surprising finds of the week, growing close to Phaeoceros laevis*, Scapania undulata and Fontinalis antipyretica. The walk back to the Village showed just how bryologically poor the heath and acid grassland of the plateau are, with significant searching required to produce more than 3 or 4 species in each 200x200m square. Fortunately 5 Snow Buntings and a Jack Snipe kept me entertained.



21st October 2019
After early morning birding in Millcombe I headed north to Quarry Pond to complete a couple of squares that I had looked at during previous visits. Scrambling round to a willow in the back of the quarry produced Orthotrichum tenellum*, whilst a mire in the quarry floor held Riccardia chamedryfolia*. Pleurozium schreberi appeared at last on a bank - goodness knows why it is so rare on Lundy - and the mortar of the ruined Quarry Cottages supported Didymodon vinealis* and Pseudocrossidium revolutum*. An enjoyable couple of hours showing Lundy Warden Dean Jones the mosses and liverworts of the Quarries area finished with us visiting Pondsbury, where Sphagnum rubellum* was detected among abundant S. subnitens, S. inundatum and S. palustre. After lunch, scrutiny of the northernmost quarry revealed Marsupella emarginata*, whilst a stream gully dropping to the east coast held the Lundy rarities Anthoceros punctatus, Philonotis fontanaPellia neesiana and Pogonatum aloides, as well as Dicranella rufescens* and Pohlia annotina* mixed together on a bank. Small plants of Plagiochila bifaria were a surprise on the tor at the east end of Halfway Wall, and Fissidens dubius* on three rocks in a stream gully south of the Quarries rounded off the day nicely. The day was accompanied by the constant chuckling of Fieldfares.



22nd October 2019
Migrating birds were a major theme of my final morning on the island: 3 Jackdaw (a Lundy Rarity), 1 Lesser Whitethroat, 1 Ring Ouzel, 1 Brambling, 1 Lapland Bunting and 2 Snow Bunting were highlights of a very busy morning. Bryophytes were not to be outdone though, and the area between Halfway Wall and Threequarter Wall on the west coast held such highlights as Entosthodon attenuatus*, Aneura pinguis, Riccardia chamedryfolia and Warnstorfia exannulata. Several large patches of Fossombronia sp. were searched unsuccessfully for sprorophytes, though most were probably F. maritima which is the only confirmed Lundy Fossombronia; potential F. incurva and F. wondraczekii need return visits for confirmation. After a leisurely wander back through the Village and Millcombe, I spent 15 minutes clambering on the lower slopes above the Landing Bay road, where Bryum donianum*, Lophozia sudetica*, Plagiochila bifaria and Rhytidiadelphus triquetrus augur well for a more extensive search. 1151 bryophyte records made during the 4 days doubles the number of bryophyte records made on Lundy, but there is still plenty of recording to be done before I can write a Bryophyte Flora of this wonderful island. I will return in 2020!

 
 

5 comments:

  1. A few things there I haven’t seen / not seen for ages, like Campylopus brevipilus (by the way, I notice the dodgy records from Mynydd Llangattock in Brecks seem to have crept into the NBN Atlas dataset via the local records centre). Is there any evidence of metalliferous spoil/species anywhere on the island? Years ago I pondered spending my meagre savings making a first trip to Lundy to twitch an Ancient Murrelet – I didn’t go and I’ve not been since, so when I do go I’ll make sure I am armed with your bryo flora of the island. By the way, have you seen the ‘illegal’ Lundy coinage – the ‘half puffin’ value coin features half a puffin!

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  2. That's a great read Sam, especially as I have fond birding/ringing memories from the island, which included a Rustic Bunting in the Heligoland trap on quarter wall - is it still there (the trap, not the bunting!)? I didn't twitch the Ancient Murrelet, though I did catch up with it during one of the ringing visits. During these trips, I did do some botanising, but I was totally oblivious to bryophytes at the time, so great to read about these island riches. Not quite making 200 gives you the perfect excuse to return and I look forward to the next update...

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  3. Thanks for the positive comments. I'm envious of your Murrelet sighting, Barry - before my twitching time. There's a Heligoland Trap on the terraces but no longer one at Quarter Wall.

    It would be fascinating to see similar resolution plant maps, eg Radiola is extraordinarily widespread and common across Lundy. It would also be nice to see Flat Holm (and Steep Holm) surveyed at 200m resolution...

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  4. Tom Blockeel corrected my putative Tortula wilsonii - it's just T. viridifolia. He sent my putative Isothecium interludens (I myosuroides var brachythecioides) to Nick Hodgetts, who confirmed the ID although he said it's rather poorly-characterised compared with Scottish material. Isothecium interludens is new for SW England!

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