On Saturday I spent a morning in Dinas Powys, specifically in tetrad ST17K - the last remaining tetrad in ST17 with no bryophyte records. It proved more interesting than expected, with a fair bit of woodland in the north and some attractive limestone outcrops.
Most of the outcrops were smothered in Thamnobryum and Anomodon, but there was a small patch of Conocephalum salebrosum in one area. The best outcrop (ST149719) held Taxiphyllum wissgrillii and a fair bit of Marchesinia mackaii (the first time I've seen it in the Dinas Powys woodlands, and new for ST17). It was growing near an impressive lichen, which Sam has identified as Dermatocarpon miniatum (thanks Sam).
I finished the outing with a quick walk around Dinas Powys Common, which added some open ground species including Microbryum davellianum (spores checked) on a patch of compacted soil. I haven't entered the records yet, but the tetrad list should be up to around 60 species.
Showing posts with label viticulosa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label viticulosa. Show all posts
Thursday, 27 December 2018
Saturday, 21 January 2017
Selar square-bash
SN80W & SN80X needed a few extra records to get them over the 60 mark, so I took an afternoon stroll, wrongly thinking the frost would have largely gone. Unfortunately, the ground and vegetation was still solid, but I eventually managed to push up the totals to 81 and 103 respectively. Although hampered by the frost, the spoil bryos appeared to be pretty limited in the edge area I looked at, Lophocolea bispinosa the only thing of any note. The remnant broad-leaved woodland along the Nant Selar was quite ordinary, though the main water course looked/sounded quite promising from the path above. I haven't ventured into coniferous woodland too often in recent years, so it was nice to experience the luxuriance of the Larch plantations again.
L. bispinosa on spoil
Sitka vs Larch field layers
Lots of P. undulatum under Larch
There were a few small falls on the Nant Selar,
the walls below mostly dominated by Saccogyna viticulosa
Tuesday, 8 November 2016
North of Pontardawe
A job in
Pontardawe yesterday gave me the opportunity to boost a couple of tetrads (SN70H
& SN70I). The sandstone crags in Coedalltacham (SN723048) held small
quantities of Amphidium mougeotii and Diphyscium
foliosum, but despite looking promising held little else of note in this rather
dry hanging oakwood dominated by Luzula
sylvactica. The most interesting event at this location was when I took off
my right welly to remove a stone, then watching it roll and bounce a couple of
times before dropping over a 5m cliff. With plenty Holly and Bramble in the
shrub layer, it was a very prickly descent to retrieve it!
The bryoflora along the banks of the nearby
stream running through more humid, largely acid oak woodland in Cwm Sion (SN729053) was much more
diverse, with frequent Amphidium mougeotii
and Saccogyna viticulosa [photo below] and
occasional Fissidens pusillus, Jungermannia
pumila, fruiting Pseudotaxiphyllum
elegans [photos below] and a small quantity of Trichostomum tenuirostre [couple of small shoots in top photo below]. Wefts of Heterocladium
heteropterum were a bit confusing as cell shape (4:1 ratio) fit var. heteropterum, but size was much
better for var. flaccidum - any advice welcome. Also I'd be grateful if anyone could let me know what the spiky rudimentary leaves are, which to the naked eye looked like dark reddish fuzz growing on rock, under shaded overhangs [bottom two photos below]? [identified by Sam as Tetrodontium brownianum].
Finally a
quick stop at a bog on Cefn Gwrhyd (SN725064), which looked interesting with frequent Hypericum elodes, Menyanthes trifoliata and nine species of Sphagnum, produced records of Cladopodiella fluitans and Warnstorfia
fluitans [photos below]. A Cephalozia looked interesting but I couldn't make it anything other than bicuspidata.
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