The relatively care-free days of social distancing (but no lockdown) seem a long while ago already, but as I write it's only been 10 days. On Sunday 22nd March, sensing what might be coming, I took a trip to Cwm Cydfin near Leckwith - a tricky to access wooded stream valley that runs down into the River Ely. This short valley straddles three different tetrads so the GPS needed to be regularly checked to be sure which square I was in at any particular point.
After a bit of scrambling over fallen trees I came to a nice soft cliff section. The whole valley is calcareous so it was no surprise to find Fissidens incurvus, Eucladium verticillatum and Riccardia chamaedryfolia here, in fact the latter species was surprisingly frequent down the entire length of the stream. More of a surprise was Rhynchostegiella teneriffae, new for my home hectad ST17.
A little further downstream, a very rotten oak log that bridged the stream supported plenty of Tetraphis pellucica and a few patches of Nowellia curvifolia - also new for ST17.
The five south-easternmost records on the map above were all made by me in the last four years, suggesting this species is spreading into the less humid areas of the county.
To round off a fun couple of hours, a Scarce Fungus Weevil Platyrhinus resinosus was found on an ash log with numerous Daldinia fruit bodies on it.
This little valley proved a lot more productive than I expected, and added 38 new tetrad records for ST17L, S and R.
Thursday, 2 April 2020
Sunday, 29 March 2020
Antivirus
Due
to that pesky virus keeping us close to home, I now have few excuses for not doing
some outstanding jobs around the house.
Last Friday I looked at the lawn and whilst deciding it didn’t need
cutting just yet, I spotted some Calliergonella cuspidata fruiting. I occasionally see this species fruiting, but
I think always in fairly wet habitats like flushes and I don’t think I have
seen it fruiting in such a dry lawn before – perhaps it is a symptom of the very wet
6 months we have just endured.
I’ll see what else I can find in the garden over the next
few weeks – might have to eke bryos out a bit, but there are plenty of other
groups to get my teeth into. After a
week of working from home I am now up to 22 bird species on my new list “Staring
out of spare bedroom window whilst taking part in telephone/ Skype sessions”. Perhaps I’ll start a separate list for each window of the house!
While
taking the photo I remembered that I had spotted a nice patch of male Lunularia
in one of our flower beds last autumn, so thought I would get a pic of that –
unfortunately the patch had almost completely degraded, but there was one male
bit still showing.
Later
that day, I made use of my daily exercise allowance by walking along some of
the lanes near home, returning along the canal towpath. The
only bryo that caught my eye was a lovely patch of fruiting Bartramia pomiformis,
on a small rock embedded in a lane bank.
Walking past a pile of mixed clay and rubble by the canal, something shiny caught my eye
and it turned out to be a small ammonite – a bit of a surprise as it not the
sort of fossil you expect to see in Devonian country. Further fossicking resulted in a few more ammonite
specimens and bits of broken Gryphaea and belemnite.
Wednesday, 25 March 2020
Daltonia update
Daltonia splachnoides habitat in Pentreclwydau Forest
Apologies for labouring on this subject, but I thought this might be of interest. Firstly, we have searched for Daltonia in 5 likely sites in NPT over the past few days. Most trips have been disappointing, but we have managed to locate a large population in Pentreclwydau Forest where at least 10 willow trees have conspicuous tufts, probably 30 + plants in total. This may be just the tip of the iceberg. There are lots of willow here and the habitat is more 'typical' of the places described in Irish Sitka forests and Brechfa, i.e. willows in the vicinity of streams and wet ditches. Some of the tufts are relatively large (15mm or more in diameter) and they occur in places where they are easy to spot. In fact the glossy, dry colonies, that stick out like little shelves, are fairly easy to see from a couple of metres away. It looks as if the population has produced lots of sporophytes although some have finished fruiting and several don't seem to have any capsules. Judging by the size of the population and the size of some plants, I guess it has been in this forest for several years.
We now have Daltonia in 3 NPT tetrads, making a total of 4 for VC41. There must be more sites in the county, but it has a long way to go to catch up with Colura. Presumably it is a more recent colonist but I also suspect that it is a bit more fussy about where it grows. Daltonia associates on the Pentreclwydau willows include: Zygodon conoideus (abundant), Radula complanata, Lejeunea patens, Colura calyptrifolia, Orthotrichum pulchellum, Metzgeria temperata, Cryphaea heteromalla, Ulota bruchii, Ulota crispa, Ulota phyllantha, Hypnum andoi, Brachythecium rutabulum.
Daltonia splachnoides with abundant capsules, on willow in Pentrecwydau Sitka Spruce Forest
Tuesday, 24 March 2020
Confusing Brachythecium - well, to me anyway.
I know I only post things on here when I need help, sorry! Hopefully in the future I'll be able to contribute more than questions on relatively common species. And this one probably is common...
I've been pottering around Craig Cerrig-Gleisiad a few times over the last couple of weeks. Once with the Gloucestershire group, but it got me hooked and I went back. I collected this 'Brachythecium' on a big boulder at the base of the cliffs at SN969221. Thought it was Sciuro-hypnum populeum, but it doesn't have the long nerve. So then I wondered about B. velutinum - which it seems quite close to, but is this the right habitat?
I'm struggling to get it to fit anything else so any help you can give would be most welcome.
Sorry, I don't have any images of it in situ, but this is my specimen, dry. Not much change when moist although the leaves do look slightly concave.

It has capsules though they have lost their lids; however I can see the seta is definitely papillose at the top, though it appears smooth below.
Branch leaves are similar to stem leaves though slightly narrower. Here's one of each:
Most leaves - both branch and stem - have this long, twisted leaf tip.
Leaf margins are smooth to faintly denticulate. Mid-leaf cells are quite long and narrow. Not sure if you can make out the measurements but they're 52 - 80 (110) x 5.5-8µm.


Leaf bases mostly have this brown colouration and don't seem to be decurrent (this is half a leaf, split down the nerve on the left).
I'm starting to wonder if it's just an odd B. rutabulum, but don't think it is. So Brachytheciastrum velutinum? Any other suggestions? Maybe not even Brachythecium?
Thank you all.
I've been pottering around Craig Cerrig-Gleisiad a few times over the last couple of weeks. Once with the Gloucestershire group, but it got me hooked and I went back. I collected this 'Brachythecium' on a big boulder at the base of the cliffs at SN969221. Thought it was Sciuro-hypnum populeum, but it doesn't have the long nerve. So then I wondered about B. velutinum - which it seems quite close to, but is this the right habitat?
I'm struggling to get it to fit anything else so any help you can give would be most welcome.
Sorry, I don't have any images of it in situ, but this is my specimen, dry. Not much change when moist although the leaves do look slightly concave.

It has capsules though they have lost their lids; however I can see the seta is definitely papillose at the top, though it appears smooth below.
Branch leaves are similar to stem leaves though slightly narrower. Here's one of each:
![]() |
Stem leaf (x40) |
![]() |
Branch leaf (x100) |
Most leaves - both branch and stem - have this long, twisted leaf tip.
Leaf margins are smooth to faintly denticulate. Mid-leaf cells are quite long and narrow. Not sure if you can make out the measurements but they're 52 - 80 (110) x 5.5-8µm.


Leaf bases mostly have this brown colouration and don't seem to be decurrent (this is half a leaf, split down the nerve on the left).
I'm starting to wonder if it's just an odd B. rutabulum, but don't think it is. So Brachytheciastrum velutinum? Any other suggestions? Maybe not even Brachythecium?
Thank you all.
Thursday, 19 March 2020
Daltonia splachnoides in NPT
Daltonia splachnoides on Willow at edge of Sitka Spruce Plantation, Abercregan
Strangely, although the site has lots of seemingly suitable and similar willows, we were only able to find it on one tree. It was growing on the north-facing side of the trunk in an epiphytic community with lots of Metzgeria temperata and Orthotrichum pulchellum as well as Hypnum andoi, Radula complanata, Ulota phyllantha, Frullania dilatata, Peltigera membranacea and a Cladonia sp. The site is more open than the Brechfa and St Gwynno Forest habitats where Sam has found it, but this is a very humid environment nevertheless.
This is the first record for NPT, the second for VC41 and (I think) the most southerly in Britain.
Daltonia splachnoides community on Willow, Abercregan
Sunday, 15 March 2020
Wye Valley
Earlier this week I visited a replanted woodland in the lower Wye valley. Apart from a small area with natural rock outcrops, it had a rather dull bryo flora and I only managed to record 45 species. The most interesting part, with the rocks, had lots of Anomodon viticulosa, some fruiting,
sheets of Porella platyphylla and a small patch of Porella arboris-vitae,
but strangely no Neckera crispa, which is usually common in this sort of habitat in this part of the world. As I hadn’t seen the rather rare moss Seligeria campylopoda for a while, I had a good look at scattered pieces of limestone on the woodland floor, but no joy.
On my way back to the office I made a lunchtime stop at Wyndcliff to see if the Seligeria was showing there. I looked in the area I saw some with a BBS excursion back in 2001, but still no luck and as the path quickly became horribly muddy, I turned around to find a drier route. Walking back towards the car park I spotted a rock with a bonus patch of Amblystegium confervoides.
Back at the office I came across a file note from the 1950s, which mentioned that the first area of wood I had visited had been recently clear-felled and replanted and had little botanical interest. Judging by the age of the trees today, I suspect it must have been clear-felled again about 30 years ago, so not surprising it was poor in woodland bryophyte species.
Wednesday, 4 March 2020
OK it's not a bryophyte but...
Onygena equina growing on the horns of a ram's skull, Resolven
...I know you lot have eclectic tastes.
We saw this on a walk on Resolven Mountain this afternoon. Growing on the horns of this ram's skull is a fabulous colony of Horn Stalkball (Onygena equina), an ascomycete in the Onygenaceae. I've only ever seen it once before. It only grows on the horn tissue and not on the bone of the skull. Unlike bone the horn is made of keratin (hair), which is a fibrous structural protein. Keratin is not easy to break down and few organisms can use it as a source of food - several fungi can do it. The reward for being able to break it down is the availability of a rich source of organic carbon and nitrogen in the form of amino acids.
There is a bryophyte in the photograph!
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