Every time I head into Cardiff on the western access road I tell myself, one day I must stop and look at the road cutting flora. The sparse vascular plant cover and abundant bryophytes on the eroding banks always looks promising. Yesterday I was nearby with a spare couple of hours, so I parked in Caerau and climbed over the fence.
For ref the BGS website shows the geology to be a combination of Blue Anchor Formation and Mercia Mudstone Group, these Triassic deposits
exposed by the A4232 cutting. The lack of any top dressing has allowed an
interesting assemblage of 26+ terricolous species to colonise. Hypnum cupressiforme var.
lacunosum, Ctenidium molluscum (only
on the S.E. side of the road) Fissidens
adianthoides and Trichostomum
crispulum were all abundant, with other frequent species noted including Aloina aloides, Dicranella varia, Didymodon
acutus, Didymodon ferrugineus and Homalothecium
lutescens.
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Didymodon acutus
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Didymodon ferrugineus
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Didymodon ferrugineus |
The central reservation and verge 'dirt zone' held locally abundant Didymodon australasiae and occasional Weissia controversa var. densifolia was noted under the crash barriers.
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Didymodon australasiae
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Nice work Barry. I remember you mentioning to me some time ago that you'd been itching to explore this cutting, so I'm glad you managed to find a way in and give it a good going over. It will give ST17H a welcome boost.
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