Sunday, 27 August 2023

Botanical Finds in Cornwall - End of July 2023

 Botany isn't always about exploring new areas for new species, sometimes you find them within a few miles of your home. I took a walk along a river valley locally, bordered on one side by a disused railway line up a cliff. I had visited this area last year looking for Toadflax-leaved St. John's-wort but had failed to find any, so this year I had another look.

It's an arduous climb to the disused railway and it was heavily overgrown with brambles and gorse, so the wearing of thick jeans to visit is a must! Along one side of the disused railway line was a cliff cut out of the hillside and it was on here that this plant used to grow in good numbers. However, over the years, it had become wooded and scrubbed over, and now only a few small bare areas of cliff were left. On one such area I found a single plant, so I was elated at seeing one. The downside was that this was an evening walk and the flower had closed, but it was great to see this species at long last.

Hypericum linariifolium



Here's a photo of its habitat. It doesn't compete well with other plants, hence it is only found on these bare areas of rock, clinging onto the shallow soils in cracks and fissures.


Climbing Corydalis can often be found around Wadebridge and there were two large clumps of it in the woodland not far from the previous plant featured. It likes shady places, so photography can be tricky in the low light of the canopy.

Cerotocapnos claviculata


As I left the area I noticed an unusual Sedge in fruit by the path. I took a sample home and keyed it out as Small-fruited Prickly Sedge. On checking previous records for the area, I found it had been recorded here before too, thus helping to confirm my identification. This was also a new species of sedge for me.

Carex muricata subsp pairae


Nearby, a Small Skipper butterfly was roosting. It's always great to see butterflies and even better to get a good photo too.

Thymelicus sylvestris


At Juy's end, many plants are at their best, including Angelica. It's quite common in Cornwall and is often found on hedgerows and roadsides given the damp habitats there. This one below was at a nature reserve near Tredinnick Pits. I had hoped to find Pillwort and  Lesser Marshwort here, but their habitat was under water from all the rain we have had and I couldn't find them.

Angelica sylvestris


I did find lots of Floating Club-rush though, but unfortunately, none had "flowers".

Eliogiton fluitans


The magnificent Royal Fern was frequent in a couple of areas, though in danger of being completely shaded out by young tree growth of Grey Willow and Sycamore.

Osmunda regalis


Flowering plants here included lovely stands of Water Mint, Gypsywort and Marsh St John's-wort amongst others, and also some unusually pink Marsh Speedwells, they are usually almost all white, as were most others of this plant here, including white flowers on the same plant as this pink one! Pink-flowered Water Speedwell tends to grow in more alkaline habitats and it is rare in Cornwall as a result.

Veronica scutellata


An unsual find here wasn't found on the reserve, but on a farm track between tractor ruts nearby. A rather small Marsh Yellow-cress. I'd only seen this plant one before growing out of a kerbstone on a rural Kent lane.


Rorippa palustris


My final trip of July was west of Week St Mary in NE Cornwall. I noticed the fungi were beginning to show here and there, unsurprising given the damp summer weather we've had all throughout July.

Below is Yellow Stagshorn Fungi which often grows on dead pine or on pine stumps as here. It turns orange as it matures.

Calocera viscosa


Saw-wort isn't just a coastal plant in Cornwall, it is also found on rural road verges and on some Cornish hedges, though usually just an odd plant here and there. I found these on a dirt track road verge just prior to the flowers opening. I've included a photo of its lower leaves too from where it gets its name. It looks very different to the Knapweed species with which you might confuse it if looking in some of the more basic guide books.

Serratula tinctoria


A fairly common hybrid that can be found is between Hedge and Marsh Woundworts. Both can grow in similar habitats and often do, and where they overlap, cross pollination is fairly frequent. Here there were around 20 flowering spikes of this hybrid. Most had the flowers of Hedge Woundwort with the unstalked stem leaves of Marsh, and a few plants had both stalked and unstalked leaves up the stems. They immediately look "wrong" when you see them for either parent species. They had previously been recorded here many years before, so they can maintain their fertility and no doubt back cross too with either parent. I found both parent species within 30m of these hybrid plants.

Stachys x ambigua


I had gone to this area to search for an old record of Wood Horsetail (Equisetum sylvaticum). Unfortunately, I failed to find it, but I did find over 50 spikes of Broad-leaved Helleborines scattered over a 100m area. Helleborines are uncommon in Cornwall, so if you want to see them, look in woodland close to the Devon border. The further west one goes, the fewer records there are for them. This is probably as there are hardly any older woodlands in the west of Cornwall which is their preferred habitat.

Epipactis helleborine



So ended July. The whole month was wet or drizzly with under average temperatures. While challenging to keep the camera dry, it was most welcome after the prolonged late Spring drought we had endured with way above average temperatures in May and June. The rain encouraged another burst of germination in annual species and kept going those that would normally dry up in a hot summer.

I hope you enjoyed reading the blog and I am sure there are many botany discoveries to be had in your own area. The key to finding them is to get out and about and walk very slowly!

Take Care

Dave



Tuesday, 15 August 2023

Botanical Finds in Cornwall - Mid to Late July 2023


The weather pattern throughout July was of numerous low pressure systems bringing wind and rain, not only for Cornwall, but for all of the UK. It seems we might have had our summer in May to June. This is all good for the plants though, especially annuals that will germinate and grow quite late in the season when conditions are right.

Here follows a selection of the wonderful wild plants of Cornwall that I have found on my travels around the county through the middle part of this month.

 

Starting off in North Cornwall near Bude and I found this Curled Pondweed in a stream close to where it entered the sea. It's a very easily identified plant and I've not seen much else like it. The stems and leaves are quite stiff and do not fold flat when you take them out of the water.

 

Potamogeton crispus

A surprise find below, was of Smith's Pepperwort, an uncommon and usually coastal plant. I found several plants in the National Trust car park at Sandymouth Bay which were new records for the monad. Unlike Field Pepperwort, the seeds on this plant have the remains of the style poking out of the top of the seed for several millimetres. The plant can grow to about two feet or so tall.

Lepidium heterophyllum


 

 I have never knowingly seen Sea Storksbill before, but I must have walked past it countless times. The leaves look similar to Common Storksbill, but not as finely cut, but if you look very closely, you will see the plants below have green flowers with no petals at all. I found these on a sandy road verge in short turf near the sea.

Erodium maritimum


I do my best to identify grasses when I have the time to study a sample at home. The one below turned out to be a very large Marsh Foxtail growing at the top of a beach in a pool from a stream, dammed by the sea piling up shingle in front of it.
 

Alopecurus geniculatus

 


 

 By a cafe on a beach were some nice looking False Fox Sedges. They have a similar structure and look to them as Star Sedge (Carex echinata) but the former are much larger and sturdier with sharply 3 angled stems and downward pointing bracts below the spikelets.

Carex otrubae


 

 Below was an example of an annual species that is usually gone over by late Spring, Thyme-leaved Sandwort. Here it is flowering again on a clifftop in short turf, thanks to plenty of rain! These can be distinguished from Slender Sandwort by their conical "flask" shaped seedpods. Slender has much smaller and straighter pods and much finer leaves too.

Arenaria serpyllifolia s.s.


 

Plenty of Speedwells are having a second go at flowering too. The following two photos show the very common larger flower of Common Field Speedwell (Veronica persica) compared to two small native annuals I found growing with it - Wall and Grey Field Speedwells.

Veronica arvensis (the tiny flower)

Veronica polita (the smaller flower)



 

 Back inland and I'm looking around the perimeter of a new housing estate and I find Corncockles on a roundabout! They were clearly sown with the amenity planting, but whether they were part of the mix or a contaminant, I don't know. There were no other typical seed mix plants on it.

Agrostemma githago


 

On a steep bank of disturbed soil by this new estate, I also found a few Field Woundwort plants, likely buried in the seedbank and brought to the surface by earthworks.

Stachys arvensis


 

Not far away was a huge area comprised of china clay waste with some footpaths through it. On some short turf I found a patch of Chamomile in flower. Easily told apart from other Mayweed type of flowers by its lovely smell when any part is crushed. This is not uncommon in Cornwall, especially on Bodmin Moor, but I'd not seen it in china waste areas before, so it was a nice find. They rarely grow more than 6" tall here.

Chamaemelum nobile


 

Another nice find on the waste area were numerous Small Cudweed plants, these are small, grey, hoary looking plants with small capitulas comprised of a few uninteresting brown flowers. These are quite rare and declining nationally.

Logfia minima


In between the rain showers, I took a local walk and ended up on an arable field edge that miraculously had not been sprayed with herbicides. Fool's Parsley was abundant along the edge of the crop of Maize. It's a smallish plant that grew to around 12" tall, but its drooping down bracts are definitive to its identification.

Aethusa cynapium



I also found an unusual Cornsalad here. Looking in the botanist Bible (Stace 4) and also the comprehensive Sell and Murrell volumes, I couldn't decide whether I had found Narrow-fruited or the glabrous form of Hairy-fruited Cornsalad. Photos were sent to the BSBI referee for Valerianella who agreed they were quite unusual, but were most likely Narrow-fruited. As both are rare finds in East Cornwall, I was still very pleased to find around 50 plants here.

Valerianella dentata var. dentata
 


 On another local walk, I passed a fenced off area that used to be an arable field but was awaiting being built on for new housing. I spotted the plants below through an impenetrable security fence, so I couldn't get any closer. Other botanists identified them for me as Narrow-leaf Clover, a non-native Clover and no doubt a crop relict. Unfortunately, I won't see it in flower next year as the bulldozers have now moved in.

Trifolium angustifolium


 I took an evening trip to Bodmin Moor as it's only a few miles away from me. In a bog I came across lots of small rush like plants that appeared to be sprouting seeds whilst still on the stalk. I'd not seen this before (bogs being rather scarce in Kent) and the VCR told me this was Bulbous Rush which commonly propogates in this fashion. There's always something new to learn in botany!

Juncus bulbosus

This bog has carpets of White-beaked Sedge in it, which looked spectacular; like little stars in the grasses.
 
Rhynchospora alba
 


 I didn't want to leave out ferns on this blog, so here's my first Lemon-scented Fern that I have not been shown by someone else! Since Covid, I have had difficulty smelling much of anything, but this fern really did have the scent of lemons and even I could smell it. What's more, when running my fingers over the back of the fronds it was sticky and felt like Sticky Groundsel to the touch, quite unique I think. You can see the lemon scent glands on the second photo below.

Oreopteris limbosperma



Bog Asphodel would have been a fine sight here a few weeks ago, but now, there were just a few plants with flowers left, the rest had gone to seed. They really are the golden gems of the bog.

Narthecium ossifragum


I did find a lone Heath Spotted Orchid still flowering a month after all the others had gone over, but orchids have featured so many times, I'll give them a miss for this blog. My final plant below, was the small but amazing Ivy-leaved Bellflower. Fairly common on damp moors and bogs in Cornwall, but much rarer the further East you go. Unfortunately, due to rain, the tiny blue flower was closed.

Wahlenbergia hederacea



I had hoped to wrap up July with this blog, but there's too many plants to choose from; if I include them all here, the blog will become too long and cumbersome and readers may just fall asleep reading it, so I will write a separate blog for the last week of July. 
Take care.
Dave



Botanical Finds in Cornwall - Early July 2023

 

 July started with wet weather which we needed herein Cornwall after such a prolonged dry spell in May/June. In the first week, I went on a Cornwall Botanical Group field trip to Goss Moor, a SSSI in Mid Cornwall. Here are some of the highlights from it.


Sneezewort is relatively common in acidic damp areas, but it's hardly ever noticed until it flowers, you can't miss those. It's a relative of the very common Yarrow plant

Achillea ptarmica


There were some lovely colourful displays from the bog plants at this time of year. Below, the yellow flowers are Bog Asphodel and the pink ones Cross-leaved Heath

Narthecium ossifragum and Erica tetralix


The frilly patterned petals of Heath Spotted Orchids were plentiful.

Dactylorhiza maculata subsp ericetorum


Marsh Ragwort flowering, it's flowers about half as big again as Common Ragwort and the terminal lobe on the leaves is huge in comparison.

Jacobaea aquatica


Round-leaved Sundews grew abundantly on the wet sphagnum moss.

Drosera rotundifolia


Near where we stopped for lunch, we noticed some odd looking St. John's-wort plants. After noting the black streaks on the leaves, lack of transluscent dots and 4 angled stems it became apparent that it was Imperforate St. John's-wort. A sample was taken to ensure it wasn't the hybrid. This was a new species for me. It is probably extinct in Kent and only the hybrid with Perforate St John's-wort is still found there.


Hypericum maculatum subsp obtusiusculum 


Here's some of the group looking for species at Goss Moor.



We also found plenty of Pale Butterwort, a carnivorous plant. I managed to get a nice photo of one in flower, including its basal leaves which traps insects using a sticky glue like substance.

Pinguicula lusitanica


We saw plenty of insects too, but my personal favourite was this Scarlet Tiger Moth, named after the colour of its underwings. There were several roosting here waiting for the rain to stop.

Callimorpha dominula


A few days later, on a local walk, I came across some Small Toadflax, a species I'd not seen in Cornwall until now. It was growing in imported aggregate surrounding an electrical sub station by an arable field. This plant seems to have taken advantage of the lack of competition from more robust plants along the field edge and moved in here.

Chaenorhinum minus


Another Toadflax nearby was Spear-leaved Fluellen with its very tiny, but colourful flowers.

Kickxia elatine


A road verge near home had some Musk Mallow in its white flowered form, beautiful!

Malva moschata


A walk in the Clay Country, north of St. Austell usually brings the discovery of some smaller species that grow in the nutrient poor mining waste of the china clay areas. Below is Trailing St. John's-wort, a small, sprawling plant with small flowers.

Hypericum humifusum


Common Centaury was in flower showing off its pink petals offset with yellow anthers, though sometimes the flowers can be white too. You can tell this species apart from the other likely species, Slender Centaury, in that this plant has a rosette of leaves persisting at the base of the plant. Slender Centaury has no rosette of leaves.

Centaurium erythraea


A nice find on the china clay waste was Heath Pearlwort in flower.

Sagina subulata



So ended early July, at least the damper conditions will favour plants staying in flower longer, rather than burning off early in Summer heat. 

Thanks for reading and I hope you liked the plants featured.

Dave

Cornwall Botany - October 2024

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