Thursday, 9 May 2024

Cornwall Botany - Early May 2024

 Although it's a balmy 20 degrees and a lovely sunny day as I write this (9th May), the first five days of May were just like before; cold, breezy and sometimes wet. The plants haven't been affected too much, some are flowering later due to the colder weather, others are flowering better and longer due to the more frequent rain. So it's swings and roundabouts as far as our local plants are concerned. Here's some of my finds for this first 8 days of May.

 For a couple of weeks now I've been looking for a rare form of Wood Anemone. It has light blue tepals instead of white ones and there are a few records for it scattered around Cornwall. Unlike in other counties, Wood Anemone is often found in the open here and not just in woodland or shaded road verges. The sites I had checked with old records for them turned up the occasional white flowered one and not much else. Most plants were still very young and undeveloped, unlike further East where drifts of them were in flower. Maybe, being out in the open means they flower later? I don't know. Anyway, I went to a rough moor covered in dead bracken with the new season's fronds curling up from the ground. In between them were clusters of Wood Anemones, with Lesser Celandines dotted around them. You can see some of last year's fronds of Bracken in this photo.

Anemone nemorosa and Ficaria verna subsp fertilis


I spent a long time searching the two locations where the blue form had been previously found to no avail. Once again, most plants had yet to flower, with only young leaves showing in these areas. As such, I gave up and just went recording what else I could find. About 500m on and I was stopped in my tracks by a scruffy looking blue Anemone. Not in the best condition, and closing up for the evening, but it was the rare form, hooray!

Anemone nemorosa var. caerulea


I hadn't even heard of this variant until I was looking through old records and found reference to them, so it was great to find one, and in a new location. Nearby was a patch of around 100 of the usual white ones, so I picked a flower to put next to the blue one for comparison.


This moor was bounded on one side by the De Lank River that feeds into the River Camel downstream. With all the recent rainfall, the flow was good and the water rushing over the rapids made for a good photo using a 1/2 second exposure (hand held too). The plant to the right of the river is Great Wood-rush (Luzula sylvatica), quite common here.


Part of the moor was very boggy and I couldn't explore it even though I was wearing wellies. On a Molinea tussock, it was a bit drier and I saw my first Heath Spotted Orchid rosette of the year. For a relatively common orchid it was strange that this was last recorded here in 2006 and not before or since.

Dactylorhiza maculata subsp. ericetorum 


Ivy-leaved and Round-leaved Water Crowfoots were growing side by side in a boggy area. The latter (pictured below) has 5 shallow lobes, giving the leaf a rounded appearance rather than 3 lobed and ivy in appearance. Ivy-leaved also commonly have dark blotches and marks on their leaves. Round-leaved have much bigger leaves and flowers than the Ivy-leaved too. These are the two most common Water Crowfoots in acidic bogs and heaths in Cornwall, though other species can be found too.

Ranunculus omiophyllus


After the blue Anemone, the other star find that evening was my first sighting of Cornish Moneywort. I'd been looking for it for some time and always managed to miss it. When I finally did see it, the leaves were tiny, and at standing height the plant looked rather like a patch of liverworts. I tried to see if any minute flowers were present, but I couldn't find any. As you can see, the big leaves were only 15mm wide, with most much smaller. I hope that I will see more of it now I know what to look for.

Sibthorpia europaea



Here is a habitat photo.


I did a recording trip to an area near Bugle that was essentially a brownfield site. It was a path through a large area of china clay spoil that had been landscaped and then left. Over the years it has fully vegetated and the lower areas have become good quality mires. In one such area I found Marsh Marigold and below it leaves of Marsh Cinquefoil (Comarum palustre) which will have lovely flowers next month.

Caltha palustris


In the same area were numerous seeding spikes of Common Cottongrass, which is actually a type of sedge and not a grass. These flower in March and are now developing their fluffy seed heads which the breeze will carry off and disperse.

Eriophorum angustifolium


Nearby, but on drier ground the first Heath Woodrushes were coming into flower. There is now a Luzula identification guide book that can be purchased from Amazon in Kindle form or directly from the author, Tim Rich (see BSBI.org). It de-mystifies this genus.

Luzula multiflora subsp multiflora


In a boggy area under Grey Willow trees I found this plant below that had me foxed. I could only think it was a Blinks, but it had transparent leaves and just looked all wrong. Of course, when I got home, I realised that it wasn't a vascular plant at all, but a moss! A big thank you to the helpful people on "X" (Twitter) for identifying it for me as Dotted Thyme Moss. It's easy to forget there are other things to look for, not just vascular plants, but mosses, liverworts, lichens and all the wildlife that feed on them. As mosses go, this species was large enough to fool me into thinking it was a vascular plant!

Rhizomnium punctatum



The next day was a family day out and we ended up at Pendennis Point, Falmouth. Of course, in between ice creams and such like, I had a brief look around and I found this flower that I'd never seen before. I had seen the plant in the same location in the Winter, but didn't know what it was at the time. Again, thanks to botanists online, it was identified as the Heart Ice Plant, which has been recorded here since 1993. Unlike the somewhat similar Hottentot Figs, this one hasn't spread and does not seem to be invasive. The flowers are quite small, around 2cm wide and the leaves are very succulent and of course, heart shaped. It was growing down a steep rock face, so I can't imagine it would have been planted, unless the imaginative gardener used mountaineering equipment to do so.

Aptenia cordifolia



 Whilst sat on the grass at Pendennis Point, a lone Bluebell put on a clifftop display for me along with associated flora, so I took its picture. It's a shame it was on my phone and not my camera as the light breeze slightly blurred the plant itself. The down side to this photo, is that when I got home I found a tick buried in the crease of my elbow. It seems they are everywhere now, not just in wild places, but even in tourist crowded areas of grass - probably from rabbits here. Thankfully I have a tick removal card that easily pulled the creature out without leaving its head inside my arm. So far, no signs of any ring mark or infection and the mark has almost gone now.

Hyacinthoides non-scripta


My last outing for this blog was just over an hour before dusk to Port Quin, a picturesque tiny cove with lovely views out to sea. If visiting, beware the tiny narrow roads that lead to it. In places there are very few passing areas, so you might have to reverse some distance if you meet one of the regular tractors that use these lanes. Below is Sea Carrot on the clifftop with the sun beginning to set.

Daucus carota subsp gummifer


Spring Squill is now at its best on the clifftops of many western coastlines including Cornwall. Instead of single flowers, there are quite a few big clumps as below, concentrating the intense blue colour of their tepals into an amazing spectacle. One part of the coastline must have had thousands of them scattered over the clifftop grassland, truly delightful.

Scilla verna


Milkwort was flowering in pink (as below), deep blue and purple colours. Usually, we have Heath Milkwort in Cornwall which prefers the acidic soils found over much of the county. However, there are pockets of Common Milkwort and that's what these were. To tell them apart, you have to look at the lowest part of the stem. If the leaves are alternate all the way to the base, then you have Common Milkwort. Heath Milkwort leaves start off opposite and after a while become alternate. To complicate matters more, most plants are very small and the lowest leaves usually fall off by flowering time, leaving little scars on the stem. As such, to identify them you need to use an eye loupe (x10 or x20) to see these little leaf scars and work out if they are opposite or alternate up the stem.

Polygala vulgaris


Another first was finding the white flowered form of Red Campion which is not that common and often mistaken for White Campion. Check the calyx and calyx teeth for the differences between Red and White Campion. The photo wasn't too good as it was almost dark by this time.

Silene dioica forma lactea


When I saw this Violet below, I thought it looked like a Pale Dog Violet, which was very unlikely given there were no records of it from the Port Quin area. Of course, a quick check of the leaves showed it to be the Common Dog Violet, but an aberrant colour form. I'm always surprised each Spring, by the variety of colours in Common Dog Violet flowers, from totally white to the most vibrant purples.

Viola riviniana


The next plants were tiny and growing on almost bare rock with English Stonecrop. The flower bud showed this to be the commonly found Scarlet Pimpernel, however, I'd never seen them so small before.

Lysimachia arvensis


My final offering is more of a view of Port Quin as I made my way back to the car park, however flowering Navelwort very obligingly gave me a floral aspect to the composition.

Umbilicus rupestris


So ended the first 8 days of May. Many more species are coming into flower now and many more to come, so now is a great time to explore your own areas and discover your local flora for yourself. There's always something new to find too, so enjoy your botanical or wildlife travels.

Dave



 



Monday, 29 April 2024

Cornwall Botany - April 2024

 As I write this near the end of April, it has been a cold, mostly wet month overall with only glimpses of Spring sunshine and never more than a few days without cloud and rain. However, the plants respond mostly to increasing daylight hours and not just temperature, so more and more species are coming into flower every week. Here's a selection of those flowering here this April.

Goldilocks Buttercups are rare in Cornwall and are found in old woodlands, so it was nice to see it at a known site near Wadebridge. This is another genus where there are many microspecies or apomictic populations. In Kent, the majority of them are scruffy and lose petals within an hour or so of opening, but here, many were intact. It seems it depends on the microspecies as to whether you find some with petals complete or not.

Ranunculus auricomus


Shepherd's Cress is a small white crucifer (related to Cabbages) and I photographed a large colony growing on a Cornish hedge near Dozmary Pool on Bodmin Moor. Unfortunately, I only had my phone with me to capture the moment.

Teesdalia nudicaulis

Thyme-leaved Sandwort has a very small flower and is often found in ruderal or waste areas, as was the case here near Wadebridge.

Arenaria serpyllifolia


Sticky Mouse-ear is a Spring annual, so by the end of May they''ll all be gone until next year. However, it seeds prolifically and it is a very common plant to find almost anywhere except very wet or very acidic places. An easy way to separate this from the other Mouse-ears is that the inflorescences are tightly bunched at the top of the stem. Size can range from 1cm tall to around 15cm.

Cerastium glomeratum


Anything coloured red in the sward really stands out. This is a leaf from a Shining Cranesbill plant growing on the thinnest of soils on a pavement. I think the colouring is a sign that the plant is stressed, but it still survives and has flowers. I wonder if red allows photosynthesis to occur?

Geranium lucidum


Ivy-leaved Speedwell is another here then gone Spring annual. It comes in two subspecies that are easy to tell apart if its in flower. Subspecies lucorum is usually found in shaded habitats such as woodland edges and has white or cream pollen. Subspecies hederifolia has blue pollen sacs and slightly wider leaves and prefers more open, light conditions. You'll need an eye loupe to magnify the tiny 5mm flower to see the anther colour unless you have very good eyes.

Veronica hederifolia subsp hederifolia


Following a tip off from the VC2 vice county recorder, I went to see a new species for me, Nettle-leaved Figwort. It was on the Camel Trail in Wadebridge by a smelly dog poo bin, so it's location was not at all glamorous.

Scrophularia peregrina


It looks a bit like a glossy Common Figwort, so I thought it would be handy to compare the two species, see the next photo below.

And the exotic location!


As April progressed, the Wood Anemones came into flower. They are dotted around Cornwall and found mainly in the wooded river valleys that farmers don't use. However, I haven't seen carpets of them like you get further East in other parts of England. I'm hoping to find a blue variant (var. caerulea) before the season ends, but it has eluded me so far.

Anemone nemorosa

Not far from the above Wood Anemones, I found what seems to be Barrenwort. It's a rare garden escape and looks like a Hedge Bindweed but with woody stems. It also throws up sprays of flowers in late Spring, so to firmly identify it I have to return in May and hope it flowers.

Epimedium pinnatum (unconfirmed)


Still in the same wood was a colony of around 50-100 Common Twayblade, these are also not as common in Cornwall as the rest of the UK. The flower spikes were just short of flowering on some plants. For those that don't know, this is one of the 50+ species of orchids found in the UK.

Neottia ovata


A garden escape naturalisation that I commonly see now is Fringecups. It's usually around 60cm tall with a spike of little flowers up it. This one was on a rural road verge near Wadebridge.

Tellima grandiflora


Spring is the time to find Wintercress. There are three species and the one below is American Wintercress. Check the uppermost leaves just below the flowers. If they are shovel shaped it is Common Wintercress; if there are a few side lobes with tiny flowers under 4.5mm wide then it is Intermediate Wintercress, and finally as Intermediate but with larger flowers over 4.5mm diameter you have American Wintercress. Hope that helps!

Barbarea verna



An unusual find was Stinking Hellebore, I believe it's not native to Cornwall. It was in woodland by a tiny rural lane between Camelford and Wadebridge. I'd only seen them before on chalk soils. No doubt a survivor of past fly tipping.

Helleborus foetidus


The hanging flowers of Redcurrant, quite a common plant in our woodlands.

Ribes rubrum


A trip to my local bog found Lousewort back in flower

Pedicularis sylvatica


Heath Milkwort in deep blue, small but beautiful. Found in acidic soils in dry heaths or drier parts of mires and bogs. Note the opposite leaves at the base of the stem. Common Milkwort has alternate leaves from base to tip. That's useful to know, as there are a few places where both species can be found growing not far apart.

Polygala serpyllifolia


When seen en masse, Bog Stitchwort look like tiny little white stars in the bog.

Stellaria alsine


A walk through a forestry woodland in mid Cornwall had carpets of the alien Rockery Willowherb, a recent arrival to the UK. It's spread here by forestry vehicles and plantation woodland is where it is predominantly found at present. I also found a patch of New Zealand Willowherb, another alien though neither were yet in flower. Both species hybridise with our native willowherbs and it is possible to find a hybrid species new to science. I will be back to look for them come the summer.

Epilobium pedunculare


Bilberry in flower from the same woodland as above.

Vaccinium myrtillus

It's rare that I find Blackcurrant in the wild, but it is a native species. It looks a bit similar to Redcurrant (see above), but the flowers don't hang like a curtain like Redcurrant does. Also, any doubt can be removed by gently squeezing a leaf then sniffing your fingers. If it's a Blackcurrant plant you will smell it as the leaves have glandular hairs that release this lovely scent when crushed.

Ribes nigrum


In a damp meadow I found numerous specimens of this dainty Dandelion. It was clear it was a Section Celtica species and I keyed it out to be a recently described species which was soon verified by the BSBI Taraxacum referee, a nice find. The leaves are very distinctive in this micro species.

Taraxacum chlorofugale


Cuckooflowers are common and found in damp roadsides, meadows and any damp areas really. However, it is very difficult to get a nice photo as the flowers reflect the sunlight back, usually bleaching out the details. Here, as it was so bright, I stopped the camera down to f16 which restricted the amount of light coming into the camera and gave an improved depth of field. You can only do this in good light or if using a tripod. This photo was near a lake in Bude.

Cardamine pratensis


The Fumitories are re-appearing, with this long thin flower belonging to Tall Ramping Fumitory. This variant always has a pink upper petal, matching the colour of the flower body. Other species have a black tipped upper petal, so this is an easy one to identify.

Fumaria bastardii var bastardii



Bogbean has an amazing flower structure but an ugly name. It is common over much of the UK and is found in bogs, mires, lake edges and anywhere permanently wet.

Menyanthes trifoliata


Early Meadow Grass used to be a rare species of southern coastal grassy areas, but it has now spread north to beyond the Midlands and is increasingly found in urban or brownfield sites. The one below though, was found on a path by a lake in totally natural surroundings. It can be confused with Annual Meadow Grass, the common grass of pavements and pretty much everywhere else.

It's characteristics are that the inflorescence is delicate and always pale green with no purple hues; the anthers are smaller than Annual Meadow Grass (you need magnification to measure them), and the lowest spikelet is usually at 45 degrees and not reflexed to 90 degrees or more. Look for lime green patches in short grass or bare ground.

Poa infirma


The clifftop edges on western coastlines are now exploding with the blue flowers of Spring Squill. In places you can get carpets of these tiny plants which look like miniature Spanish Bluebells. Lovely little plants.

Scilla verna


Typical habitat below


Horsetails didn't seem too complicated, until I realised that they freely hybridise. To check whether you have the true species or a hybrid, you need to cut open a stem to observe the hollow inside it. Below is Water Horsetail which is the only species that has an almost circular stem with a very large hollow, this rules out any hybrid. It's often unbranched as shown below and forms large stands in damp areas or by water bodies.

Equisetum fluviatile


Nearby were Marsh and Field Horsetail so it was worth checking for hybrid plants, but this day I failed to find any, though they had been recorded from this venue before. Below is Marsh Horsetail with small branches to the stem and a small hollow stem strongly ridged.

Equisetum palustre


Marsh Marigolds in a boggy part of a lake near Bude, they light up the bog with their golden hues. Even the seedpods are a fantastic colour.

Caltha palustris



My final plant is another Dandelion, this time from near Bude in another damp meadow. It's a Section Celtica microspecies and is fairly delicate. It keyed out in the Field Handbook as Taraxacum nordstedtii as there appeared to be pollen present.

However, since writing this, I have been notified by the BSBI referee that this is in fact Taraxacum pietii-oosterveldii and is new to Cornwall. The nearest known colony is on Dartmoor. The pollen is not on the anthers and appears to have been transferred from another plant by an insect. A plant without pollen takes one to a different part of the key.

If you get into trying to identify Dandelion microspecies, you will need the Field Handbook from the BSBI for sure; then take photographs of all relevant parts, like below. Take additional photos of seeds if present and any flowers in bud too. You then work through a key to work out which section your specimen comes under which takes you to another key. You then go through that, ruling features in or out and use your photos to confirm. It's quite time consuming, but it's a fun thing to do in April to early May. After that, the leaves become degraded and grow erratically, not true to type and most  cannot be readily identified thereafter until the following Spring. There's over 230 micro species to find and probably a few as yet undiscovered. Oh, don't bother looking at any that have been previously mowed, grazed or trampled, drought stricken or flooded! That rules out most Dandelions you will see!

Taraxacum pietii-oosterveldii


May is coming and I hope it's a bit drier and warmer than it has been in the previous few months. Until then, take care and see what species you can find close to you.

Dave







Cornwall Botany - October 2024

 It's stayed mild for the entire month which has encouraged the summer plants to continue flowering, such as Rough Chervil, but also has...