Showing posts with label Whiteford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whiteford. Show all posts

30 June 2012

BSBI meeting at Whiteford


The route taken by Saturday's group of hardy souls first took us up onto Cwm Ivy Tor where between the showers we enjoyed excellent views of Whiteford Burrows and logged some interesting plants including White Horehound (Marrubium vulgare) and Ivy Broomrape (Orobanche hederae).
Cwm Ivy Tor on a sunny day!
We then moved into the ‘new’ slack in vain hope of finding Fen Orchid (Liparis loeselii), now unrecorded at Whiteford for a good number of years. As expected we failed to rediscover it, but did record a good number of scarce and localised species in a very healthy and sizeable dune slack.

Grass Eggar (Lasiocampa trifolii) Notable A
found wandering across Slack 7
After a quick sortie along the strandline we moved into the established dunes and made it as far as the last plantation to record the extent of the Common Wintergreen (Pyrola minor) colony first discovered in 2010.
the not-so-diverse Common Wintergreen site
As we headed back through the upper saltmarsh transition on the eastern side of dunes the sharp-eyed Peter Sturgess rediscovered what turned out to be a healthy population of Saltmarsh Flat-sedge (Blysmus rufus), a plant that had not been seen in the county since 1905 when Eleanor Vachell first recorded it as new to Glamorgan and at its southern-most UK location.
Saltmarsh Flat-sedge
The day’s tally of 234 vascular plants plus a further 16 lower plants highlights the importance of the diverse habitats found in this beautiful corner of Gower. Many thanks to those who attended and made the day a memorable one depsite the weather: John Crellin, Alison Heath, Ursula Jones, Ceri Richards, Alastair Stevenson, Robe Stokes, Peter Sturgess, Kaz Wilkinson, Vanessa Williams & yours truly.


To see some of John's excellent images click here.

09 May 2012

Hoopoe at Whiteford

Hoopoe (c) Rein Part
Rein Part was very fortunate to find a Hoopoe along the new coastal footpath at Whiteford last Saturday. Even better was that he was able to digiscope it, enabling him to share his good fortune. The bird was feeding avidly on the grass near the clump of Monterey Cypress at SS448955.

22 April 2012

Baltic Bryum at Whiteford NNR

Sam Bosanquet recently discovered a healthy population of one of Wales' rarest mosses, Baltic Bryum (Bryum marratii), at Whiteford NNR. Listed as Vulnerable in the UK Red Data List, it is extinct in England, was formerly known from just two sites in Wales (now four since Sam has also found it in Carmarthenshire), and there are scattered populations in Scotland and Ireland. Without GPS it would have been difficult to relocate this diminutive moss in the tightly grazed sward of the seepage line that runs along the upper saltmarsh transition at the Groose (SS444945).
Baltic Bryum (Bryum marratii)
Associates of the Bryum included...
 English Scurvygrass (Cochlearia anglica)
Slender Spike-rush (Eleocharis uniglumis)