Registration has opened for the inaugural Plants,People, Planet symposium, to be held at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, on 4–5 September 2019.
The symposium aims to highlight outstanding plant-based research
in its broadest sense and celebrate everything new, innovative and exciting in
plant sciences that is relevant to society and people’s daily lives.
Leading scientists and invited early career
researchers will give talks based on seven broad themes: engaging people
with plants, plants and society, plant conservation, plant diversity, plant
genomics applications, plants and global change, and plant natural
assets. Defra’s Chief Plant Health Officer, Nicola Spence, and the Director of
the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, Ned Friedman, will both give
keynote talks. Each session will conclude with an engaging Q&A panel, and
there will be a poster session and symposium dinner on site at Kew.
A number of grants will be awarded to early career researchers in
association with each meeting. Successful grant applicants will receive free
registration as well as a contribution towards their travel and expenses. Apply here before the deadline of Friday 14th June.
If you'd like to exhibit a poster, please submit an abstract here before the deadline of Monday 8th July.
You will be able to follow the event live on Twitter via the @plantspplplanet account and hashtag #PPP19.
Friday, 31 May 2019
Thursday, 30 May 2019
BSBI Training Grants Helping Botanists in 2019 - thanks to Byron's Gin
In the classroom at FSC Juniper Hall Image: C. Sugrue |
Sadly we were unable to offer grants to everyone who applied but - thanks to the contribution we receive from Speyside Distillery for every bottle sold of Byron's Gin - we have been able this year to award grants to 25 next generation botanists eager to attend training courses to improve their botanical ID skills.
This year's first training grant recipient to report back on the course she was able to attend thanks to her BSBI Training Grant is PhD student Ciara.
Ciara's homemade sample book and grass ID key Image C. Sugrue |
Ciara is also known to many of you as a member of BSBI's Meetings & Comms Committee and one of the New Year Plant Hunt Support Team but those were not factors in the award of the grant. Her application was considered on merit, as are all grant applications, by members of BSBI's Training Team, who look at various criteria and then vote independently on which applicants they think should receive a grant.
So over to Ciara to tell us about the course she attended:
"Like most beginner botanists, I have been avoiding grasses as
I didn’t know where to start. So, when the opportunity came up to apply for a
grant to attend the FSC course 'Identifying Grasses in Spring', I couldn’t
resist applying.
"The course is run by Judith Allinson who is a co-author of
the AIDGAP Key to the Vegetative Stages of Grasses and spent several years
carrying out botanical surveys for English Nature, so who better to learn
from?
Looking for Glyceria fluitans floating in the pond Image: C Sugrue |
"On the first evening Judith helped us create a book where all our samples could
be placed based on a diagnostic feature such as, is the first leaf rolled or
folded. This book was a brilliant idea as when sampling in the field
we understood why Plant A was placed in Section 2.
Dactylis glomerata: flat at the base and a one-sided panicle (here, it's facing away from the camera) Image: C. Sugrue |
"We practiced our knowledge of what we learnt in the
laboratory during our daily field excursions. All we needed for our days out
were our hand lens, handmade keys and identification book. We visited a number
of different habitats, including pastures, downland, heathland and woodland
habitats. This exposure to different habitats meant that we
could learn about as many different grasses as possible. On one afternoon field
excursion we identified 32 grasses!
"Judith is a brilliant botanist. She gave us lots of helpful
hints and tips to help us identify the grasses both in flower and not in flower. At the end of the course we were tested on our knowledge of
the grasses we had seen. This was helpful as it made you realise how much you
had learnt over the three days.
"Since attending the course, I can now put my new found
grasses knowledge and identification skills into practice with my local BSBI group.
I thoroughly enjoyed the course run by Judith Allinson on 'Identifying Grasses
in Spring' and would highly recommend applying for a BSBI training grant so that, like me, you
are able to overcome your problem group!"
Wednesday, 29 May 2019
Botanica: focus on artists who sought inspiration from the natural world
A new art exhibition with a botanical theme has just opened at the Tristan Hoare Gallery in Fitzroy Square, London.
The exhibition Botanica focuses on works by a diverse group of artists who have sought inspiration from the natural world, from the 16th century to the present. Cy Twombly, Rory McEwen, Robert Mapplethorpe and Pablo Picasso are showcased alongside emerging artists; the show also features the largest leaf and seed in the world revisited by contemporary artists.
The inspiration behind Botanica was the work of botanical artist Rory McEwen, whose name will be familiar to many botanists. For those who have not yet encountered him, this review by BSBI member and botanical artist Martin Allen of a 2013 exhibition should prove a helpful introduction to McEwen's work.
The exhibition runs until 5th July and you can find out more about the exhibition, and the gallery's location and opening times, on their website.
Installation shot of the Botanica exhibition Courtesy of Tristan Hoare |
The exhibition Botanica focuses on works by a diverse group of artists who have sought inspiration from the natural world, from the 16th century to the present. Cy Twombly, Rory McEwen, Robert Mapplethorpe and Pablo Picasso are showcased alongside emerging artists; the show also features the largest leaf and seed in the world revisited by contemporary artists.
The inspiration behind Botanica was the work of botanical artist Rory McEwen, whose name will be familiar to many botanists. For those who have not yet encountered him, this review by BSBI member and botanical artist Martin Allen of a 2013 exhibition should prove a helpful introduction to McEwen's work.
The exhibition runs until 5th July and you can find out more about the exhibition, and the gallery's location and opening times, on their website.
Wednesday, 22 May 2019
National Plant Monitoring Scheme: interview with Volunteer Manager Dr Rachel Murphy
Rachel applies a hand lens to help ID that plant |
The NPMS recently appointed a new Volunteer Manager, Dr Rachel Murphy. I
caught up with her to get her take on this important citizen science scheme.
LM: So Rachel, you were appointed last October and started in
post in January. I bet your feet have hardly touched the ground since then!
Before you tell us about the scheme and how you support the volunteer
surveyors, can you tell us about yourself – what were you doing before you came
to the NPMS?
RM: Yes, it has been a real whirlwind over the last few months but I have thoroughly enjoyed getting to know the ins and outs of the scheme and of course the friendly and dedicated volunteers that make it possible.
Rachel in her previous role, with MARINElife |
Before starting with NPMS I spent five years as the Conservation Science Manager for MARINElife, a Dorset based marine conservation charity with a national and European reach. I coordinated and reported on a number of volunteer research programmes, including nationwide monthly ferry surveys, regional small boat programmes and public and partner driven photo-ID studies. All carried out with the support of hundreds of trained and enthusiastic volunteers, providing monitoring evidence and advocating the value of volunteer data for conservation and management. The main difference of course, we were monitoring cetaceans and seabirds, which have a habit of diving under the water or flying away when you’re trying to ID or count them!
Rachel keeping a firm grip on a seabird! Flowers are much more obliging - they stay still while you count them! |
LM: Ah, so lots of opportunities to build
up all those transferable skills you need in order to support the hundreds of NPMS
volunteers! What would you say was the main thing that attracted you to your
new role?
RM: I’m a huge advocate of the value of citizen science and
volunteer data for monitoring, conservation and management. Together with the
right methodologies, guidance and training, citizen scientists can make an
excellent contribution to both society and scientific understanding, along with
the importance of this work in public engagement and community pride in local
natural history. I was incredibly impressed with not only the development
of the scheme, with the partners and
volunteers working together to create an accessible and inclusive scheme, which
is very robust and maintains scientific rigour, but also the engagement and
reach of the scheme which is still relatively young. There is clearly an
appetite for volunteers wanting to share their experiences in a meaningful way
and contribute to our knowledge and understand of national species trends and
status.
One of many NPMS training sessions held each year around the UK Image: D. Price |
LM: Can you remind readers what they need to do if they want to get involved in surveying for the NPMS, and how you support the volunteers at each of those stages?
RM: Its really easy for folk to get involved and hopefully start surveying with the NPMS. By going to the website www.NPMS.org.uk you can find out about the scheme, take a look at the various resources and guidance on offer and then check the “Squares near you” map to see where there are currently scheme survey squares available for volunteers to adopt. There are currently almost 3,000 squares (1,300 still available) nationwide, so there is every likelihood there is a square awaiting allocation in your area. Registering to become an NPMS volunteer takes just five minutes and once signed up you can request an available square of your choice from the map. Allocated volunteers are then sent our survey and guidance pack by post.
The NPMS survey and guidance pack |
LM: How about the role of social media? What support is
available there for NPMS volunteers?
RM: The NPMS has a busy page on Facebook acting as a useful
noticeboard showing the scheme’s activities and news,and at the end of last
year we set up the NPMS support group on Facebook. It is a closed group of
registered NPMS volunteers and mentors - a friendly platform and point of contact
between volunteers and a great space for sharing your experiences and advice.
Membership of this group has tripled just since the launch of the spring
season! There are plans afoot to set up an Instagram account for the NPMS and
there’s also an active and friendly community of volunteers, mentors and
partners on Twitter which you’ve been leading on, Louise – go on, tell the
readers about that!
LM: It’s true, as
part of BSBI’s partnership on the NPMS I’ve been helping out with the NPMS
Twitter account. You can follow us @theNPMS
and check out hashtags #NPMS or #NPMSvolunteers
- you don’t need a Twitter account to see what people are talking about, you only
need an account if you want to join the conversation. But let's get back to you Rachel: can you tell us how
many people have signed up for the scheme this year, and how many NPMS
surveyors are there in total across the UK?
NPMS training session at Ranscombe Farm Image E. Bramley |
RM: The scheme has a tremendous 1,344 volunteers currently allocated a square across the UK, each surveying between 1-5 squares. Over 1,500 1km2 survey squares are currently allocated to volunteers. It’s a huge effort! Just in the last year (since April 2018), over 1,300 volunteers have registered with the scheme and around 450 volunteers have been allocated a square in that time. Over 200 of these allocations have happened just since the start of January this year, really showing the building momentum and engagement in this scheme.
NPMS training session, Pewsey |
RM: We would love to see greater uptake of volunteers and
square coverage in Scotland, namely the West coast, South west Scotland and
also the highlands. Unsurprisingly these areas shown as “blue” on the map
comprise some remote and tricky terrain, so we have been building relationships
with the likes of the Cairngorms National Park and the South West Scotland
Environment Information Centre (SWSEIC), among others to help us to promote the
scheme and train in these areas. Other regions include North East England, i.e.
the North York Moors and Northumberland, Central Wales, Lincolnshire and
Norfolk. We’re building great relationships on many of these areas with
stakeholders and landowners such as the National Trust, the MoD and a number of
the National Parks. So we’re all ready for new volunteer surveyors when they
register!
Rachel uses the NPMS species ID guide and Rose & O'Reilly's Wildflower Key to identify the plants in her plot |
LM: There are three different “levels” at which people can
take part in the scheme, from ‘Wildflower’ level, where you are just looking
for 25-30 species (all fairly easy to ID) and which is ideal for the less
experienced botanist (taking part in the NPMS is actually a great way to build
up your ID skills!) right up to ‘Inventory’ level – that’s where you record all
the plants you can spot - which is maybe more suited to experienced botanists.
Is there any other way that more experienced botanists can contribute to the
scheme?
Marking out a 10m x 10m woodland plot Image: H. New |
Marking out a 25m x 1m linear streamside plot |
NPMS mentors will be really important in this aim, however much (or little!) time they may be able to contribute.
LM: What about when it comes to entering our data? Even if surveyors manage to find and identify the wildflowers in their square, uploading data can be a bit tricky for those of us who are not very tech-savvy! Is there help available for anyone who gets stuck? Fore-warned is fore-armed!
RM: I certainly wouldn’t be put off by online data entry.
Once you’ve done it once you’ll know for future submissions. Plus, we have lots
of help and support on this front - our
volunteers have made the effort to go out and record on their plots so we want
to make sure they can submit that all important data so that it can be used!
The resources page on
our website has guidance as to how to set up plots on your online profile as
well as how to submit data, including Youtube videos
that walk you through the process. I think often watching it being done makes a real
difference. Once at the point of data entry, the online forms themselves try to
replicate the recording forms used in the field as much as possible, so that
it’s just a case of transferring the information over.
We also now have an NPMS
mobile App available for download for both Apple and
Android
phones for those volunteers wishing to use one. This means that once your
account and plots are set up on your desktop, you can record your survey data
there and then in field. If you still have any trouble at all, we are here to
offer help and support by email or phone. No question is too small!
LM: And what exactly happens to the NPMS data once it has
been submitted?
Representatives of the NPMS partner organisations back in 2013, testing the methodology. Spot Oli Pescott (CEH), Pete Stroh & Bob Ellis (BSBI) and Felicity Harris (Plantlife) Image M. Pocock |
LM: I know that later this year you’re planning to interview Kevin Walker, BSBI’s Head of Science, about the data and research aspects of the scheme, so we’ll find out more then. Meanwhile, how about any scientific papers already published?
RM: There are already a number of scientific papers and
reports published about the scheme, including some in high impact journals.
This includes our recent publication in PLoS ONE “The
design, launch and assessment of a new volunteer-based plant monitoring scheme
for the United Kingdom” which highlights the great collaborative effort in
the scheme by the scheme partners, BSBI, Plantlife, CEH, JNCC
and now Daera-NI, along with the
volunteer surveyors. Like any long term monitoring project investigating
trends, it requires a number of years of data, making this fifth year of the
scheme a pivotal moment and surveys from the first four years are already
providing much-needed data on the abundance of indicator species on a regional
scale. You can find all our publications and reports to date on the Conservation &
Research page of the NPMS website.
LM: Well it sounds like all bases are covered and there’s
help on hand for NPMS surveyors at every stage. So, two questions to finish:
firstly, if anyone is still wondering why it’s important to get involved in the
NPMS, what would you say to them?
Marking out a 5m x 5m grassland plot |
NPMS training session - learn how to set up your survey plots and meet some of your fellow plant monitors |
RM: I do have certain goals and aims regarding the number of squares allocated and volunteers registered of course, we want to see greater coverage. But truly, I strongly believe that the importance of supporting volunteers with adequate training, guidance, development opportunities and feedback is incredibly high, in keeping volunteers engaged, excited by our work and ensuring they are seeing results and outputs from the hard work and time they have invested. So for me, I’d like to see high levels of volunteer retention, repeat surveys and data submission for those allocated squares – all of which we are more able to quantify now as we hit our fifth year.
Rachel Murphy: all set to support NPMS surveyors (she's really helpful and friendly!) |
LM: Rachel, thank you so much for talking to us about the
NPMS, what it means to you and why we should all get involved. And for any
readers who haven’t yet registered for the scheme, head over here now
and join the NPMS community!
Watch this space for more interviews with the people behind the NPMS: but coming up next, we follow a first-time NPMS volunteer as she gets to grips with setting up her plots and carrying out her very first NPMS survey.
Photographs on this page courtesy of Rachel Murphy/ NPMS unless otherwise stated.
Watch this space for more interviews with the people behind the NPMS: but coming up next, we follow a first-time NPMS volunteer as she gets to grips with setting up her plots and carrying out her very first NPMS survey.
Photographs on this page courtesy of Rachel Murphy/ NPMS unless otherwise stated.
Tuesday, 21 May 2019
British & Irish Botany: issue 2 published
Taraxacum chlorofrugale in Cardiganshire - this new species is described in British & Irish Botany 1.2 Image: R. Pryce |
This latest issue is 114 pages long and features six papers by some well-known botanists, including dandelion expert John Richards; BSBI's Officer for England Pete Stroh; County Recorders from north Somerset (Helena Crouch) and Banffshire (Andy Amphlett); and Fred Rumsey from the Natural History Museum, alongside some less well-known names.
Editor-in-Chief Dr Ian Denholm said:
"This issue includes six papers by professional and amateur botanists covering the ecology, systematics and conservation of the British and Irish flora.
"The papers encompass diverse plant groups including grasses, sedges, rushes, orchids and composites (dandelions and mayweeds).
Bolboschoenus laticarpus in Shropshire: a paper in British & Irish Botany 1.2 asks if this plant is an overlooked native or a spreading neophyte Image: H Crouch |
Check out the latest issue here and you can also view issue one here. If you like what you see, why not register as a reader to receive an alert every time a new issue is published?
If you'd like to submit a manuscript for consideration, just register as an author as well as a reader, take a look at the house style guidelines and send us your submission.
Or email us at bib@bsbi.org to discuss your proposal. We'll look forward to hearing from you.
If you'd like to submit a manuscript for consideration, just register as an author as well as a reader, take a look at the house style guidelines and send us your submission.
Or email us at bib@bsbi.org to discuss your proposal. We'll look forward to hearing from you.
Sunday, 19 May 2019
Wild thyme: controlling nightmares, flavouring honey and in Byron's Gin
Wild thyme Image courtesy of John Crellin/ Floral Images http://www.floralimages.co.uk/page.php? taxon=thymus_polytrichus,1 |
Clive Stace's New Flora of the British Isles 4th ed. lists five thymes recorded in the wild in Britain & Ireland. There's garden thyme Thymus vulgaris, with leaf margins curled backwards; lemon thyme T.x. carolipaui, with a distinct lemon scent; large thyme T. pulegioides which has a scattered distribution and can be identified by having hairs on all four angles of the lower stems; and T. serpyllum Breckland thyme, found in c22 sites in Suffolk and Norfolk. The species used in Byron's Gin is the more common wild thyme Thymus drucei, which can be identified by checking the lower part of the stems: it has hairs on two of the four faces, but the other two are hairless.
Wednesday, 8 May 2019
Send us your pearlworts!
Sea pearlwort growing inland - between brick paving Image: M. Wilcox |
But now Mike wants your pearlworts. He told me "Sea pearlwort Sagina maritima may be more frequent
inland as a halophyte (a salt-tolerant plant). Road verges and or waste ground near roads etc. should
be searched. Any plants rooting at the nodes will be the much more common procumbent pearlwort S. procumbens. However, in
small rosette-like plants where they are not rooting at the nodes they could be
either (some may be more upright).
"As part of a study looking into useful
characters for these two in difficult situations, please collect fresh voucher
specimens and send to the address below – photos of the plant and close-ups of
fruiting heads would be useful:
Michael Wilcox: 43 Roundwood Glen,
Greengates, Bradford, BD10 0HW.
For S. maritima, any specimens from the usual (coastal) habitats would also be welcome".
Sea pearlwort has recently been found on two road-verges in Leicestershire - about as far from the coast as you can get! - so it could turn up anywhere: keep your eyes peeled and send those specimens to Mike.