Saturday, 7 June 2014

BSBI Summer Meeting: Part Seven

Botanists on Ben Vrackie
Image: I. Denholm
Here is a report about the closing talk on Day 1 of the Summer Meeting, and the lovely images gracing the page were taken by Ian on Ben Vrackie yesterday - you can see the rest of them here.

Our closing talk was given by Syd House, of the Forestry Commission Scotland, entitled Perthshire – Big Tree Country and once again Jon Shanklin has kindly shared his rough notes with us. 

"Perthshire has some famous trees, which in part led to the project name: in order to attract visitors, and then have the revenue to look after what is there. It covers 90,000 hectares with 25 million trees and has the greatest concentration of heritage trees in Europe, with 22 of Scotland’s Heritage Trees


Astragalus alpinus on Ben Vrackie 6/6/2014
Image: I. Denholm
"Perthshire does have remnants of the natural forest, but there is also a strong horticultural tradition and conditions are excellent for tree growth. Wind does not cause stunting of growth in the deep glens. Timber has been used since the Neolithic period, for example in Crannogs, but the landscape has been changed by man since then. Syd took us on a journey through some of the ancient trees and their sites. The Fortingall Yew is very old, though exactly how old is not known, perhaps 5000 years if you believe the story. There are Celtic remains in the vicinity, so perhaps! 


Sounds like the plants were worth the climb!
Image: I. Denholm
"Birnam itself has the Birnam Oak and Birnam Sycamore, which is several hundred years old. The Oak is reputed to have been seen by Shakespeare. There are just as many Wallace Oaks in Scotland as there are Charles Oaks in England. Perthshire has been known for tree growing since the 19th century, and perhaps even earlier with orchards planted by monks. 

"The Planted Larch of Dunkeld was planted in 1737 by the second Duke of Atholl, and this led to the establishment of an early Larch forest. There are many other sites, often associated with the “planting Dukes of Atholl” and their contemporaries. 


Listera ovata on Ben Vrackie
Image: I. Denholm
"David Douglas and Archibald Menzies brought back the Sitka Spruce and Douglas Fir (the original is in Scone pinetum), which were then brought into forestry. There are several interesting photographic collections showing some of the plantings in their early years. 80% of the world’s timber use is conifer and it is important to know how they will do as climate change proceeds, which is why there is some experimental forest plantation. Syd closed by reminding us that we are planting today for future generations to enjoy. 

"In response to a question, Ash dieback has been found in the area, but it has probably been around for some time. It may take many years for a slow decline in the Ash population to take place".

I hope these posts have given you all a flavour of this year's Summer Meeting, if you were unable to attend, and an opportunity to point and screech "That's me in the Baronial Hall!" if you were able to make it this year!

Many thanks to Jon, Ian and of course Jim, who I hope is now relaxing with a well-earned drink after organising another excellent botanical get-together. Slainte, Mr McIntosh :-)

Sedge Workshop at Roudsea Wood & Mosses NNR

Carex flava & C. x alsatica
Image: G. Quartly-Bishop
The BSBI Summer Meeting was not the only botanical meeting today - even leaving aside the local group meetings up and down the country, a quick look at the Field Meetings Programme shows that there was also a Cumbrian Sedge Workshop at Roudsea Wood and Mosses NNR in VC69, led by Mike Porter.

Initial report in from Gail via Twitter, and many thanks for the photo:


Carex flava (L) and Carex x alsatica (R). The big exciting sedges of the morning at Roudsea Wood with :)

BSBI Summer Meeting: Part Six

Pseudorchis albida, Keltneyburn
J. MacKinnon 7/6/2014
Report in from Jon Shanklin on one of today's Perthshire fieldtrips, this one to Keltneyburn and Schiehallion – Leader Jim McIntosh.  

Jon says "The morning was spent at the Scottish Wildlife Trust site, which is part of the Keltneyburn SSSI.  We first went along the track to view Melampyrum sylvaticum, which 'coincidentally' Jim needed to assess for a site condition survey! We found 89 flowering plants.  

"It was then down the track a short way to the species rich Balchroich meadow, with Meum athamanticum, Persicaria vivipara and Pseudorchis albida and a plant that seemed to key to Picris hieracoides, though it has never been seen there previously.  Jim will return in a few weeks for further surveys and will report back!  

Botanists at Schiehallion
Image: J. Shanklin
"After lunch overlooking the meadow we headed for Schiehallion, which has a pavement of Dalradian limestone (approx 540 my old), very different to those of Carboniferous limestone (only 330 my old).  Here we immediately saw Asplenium viride, debated which Polygala we had (in the end both), admired Antennaria dioica and heard a Cuckoo.  With time passing and storm clouds looming, Jim took us down to a small burn, passing Genista anglica on the way. 

"Here we saw several different sedges and rushes, but time was up and we had to return.  We had been in the cars no more than five minutes before the rain started, bang on the time forecast by the meteorologist and recorder of the day!"

BSBI Summer Meeting: Part Five

BSBI botanists on Ben Vrackie
Image: I. Denholm
Our President Ian Denholm is home from the (Perthshire) hills bearing photographs from this year's annual Summer Meeting; they adorn this page and if you send me some nice images, they will also be posted here, so get snapping please! 

While Jon & co were at the Birks o' Aberfeldy yesterday, Ian had opted to join the team of botanists visiting Ben Vrackie. Among the botanical gems they saw was Oxytropis halleri which Ian notes is "a real Ben Vrackie speciality, but the flora was fantastic generally and we were blessed with almost perfect weather. The leader of this trip was Theo Loizou (one of the VCRs for Angus), who did a great job keeping folks together and the whole visit on schedule."

Cerastium alpinum, Ben Vrackie 6/6/2014
Image: I. Denholm
More on the field meetings to follow, but here are Jon Shanklin's notes, recorded live on Day 1 of the meeting and unpolished, so I hope you enjoy this precis of Tom Christian's talk on iCONic – The International Conifer Conservation Project. Jon tells us "This is a globally important mission to preserve some important trees from extinction.  There are many threats to conifers, eg logging, or open-cast mining in New Caledonia, which has 13 endemic species of Araucaria - these are excellent indicators of nickel. 

"This project matters because conifers are very important resources for us as well as for wildlife. We use them for food, forestry, fuel and drugs (eg Taxol).  They help regulate climate through feedbacks of albedo and transpiration. Conifers are the largest, tallest and longest lived species. iCONic collects seed from natural populations where they are grown on in the nursery at Edinburgh, then found homes at sites in Perthshire Big Tree Country. In 2013 the organisation had an expedition to Chile covering one fifth of the length of the country. In a short time, a large part of the native endemic temperate forest had been replaced by a monoculture of new species. They did find a small population of a native endemic, but it is threatened by a hydroelectric project. In Bosnia a conifer is being out competed by Figs. In Lebanon they looked at Cedar of Lebanon, where the nominative species is under threat. In Japan they collected seeds of Abies hermanucus and Japanese Umbrella pine, and a spruce which had not been collected for around 100 years. Pseudotsuga japonica had never been grown in Edinburgh.

Oxytropis halleri, Ben Vrackie, 6/6/2014
Image: I. Denholm
"Perthshire is an ideal place to grow many of the endemic species of temperate regions. iCONic aims to establish at least 7000 plants in Perthshire. All collections are fully databased and each plant is tracked as it grows. Many of the Perthshire forests were planted in the 18th and 19th centuries and provide today’s landscape, and the project will create that for tomorrow. 

"Planting will be on a more natural scale than Sitka spruce forest, with groves of semi-natural style woodland. They are working with many other organisations with similar interests to achieve the objectives. Ten trees from Tasmania were planted just outside Perth – in the UK they have mostly been planted in the west, so weren’t expected to do well, however they are thriving. Experimentation is part of the project, and knowing why plants do well or badly is important for conservation. 

Botanists heading up Ben Vrackie
Image: I. Denholm
Jon concludes "iCONic has various webpages, an e-newsletter and social media feeds. In response to a question: there has been no opposition to planting, and the sites have been chosen where there is already a large population of non-native species. Many of the species suffer from very poor natural regeneration in any case. So far no seed has been of sufficient quality (eg not hybrid) to risk replanting in their native country. In future it may be possible to do controlled fertilisation to get good seeds.

BSBI Summer Meeting: Part Four

The first report is in from one of the many fieldtrips offered as part of the BSBI Summer Meeting in Perthshire. Many thanks to Jon Shanklin, who tells us that "Scottish Officer Jim McIntosh led a party to the Birks O'Aberfeldy, a tree-covered ravine, with a fast flowing stream, but a fairly easy path to the waterfall at the top.  A group of 8 met up in the upper car park on a fine morning.  Recording began in the car park, where a planted Euonymus was clearly not the native one. More on this later!  

Trientalis europaea photographed
6/6/2014 at Birks o' Aberfeldy
Image: J. Shanklin
"We headed up the left hand track to the falls, stopping frequently to describe the features of new plants, and occasionally seeing more northern species that were unfamiliar to the southerners, such as Phegopteris connectilis.  At the top of the path a wet meadow provided many additions to our species list, with Trollius europaeus in flower and Cirsium heterophyllum starting to show.  On the way down we saw Trientalis europaea, another species new to many.  Having reached the car park there was still time for tea before returning, so we continued into the town adding a few more species, including Euphorbia dulcis which had spread from a garden across the footpath.  

"Back at the hotel Stace III helpfully noted a rare Himalayan species that was similar to E. europaeus but had purple anthers – just like ours did!  All the day's excursions were reported after dinner in the Baronial Hall, with a volunteer selected to speak for a couple of minutes on each visit. As these were often personal views, other members of the party often chimed in with additions to the notable species, and Ian Bonner thought Neottia nidus-avis and Equisetum pratense should also be mentioned from the Birks".

Thanks to Jon for the report and the photo. If you are at the Summer Meeting and have a camera, please take some images for News & Views and send to louise.marsh@bsbi.org

BSBI Summer Meeting: Part Three

More from Day 1 of the Summer Meeting, where Alistair Godfrey gave a talk on The history of recording in Perthshire and some of the plants our botanists were likely to see during their visit. 

Agrimonia eupatoria
Image: J. Crellin
Jon Shanklin reports that "Rannoch Moor has many small pools which provide homes to plants such as Scheuchzeria palustris (discovered in England but now extinct there) and Carex limosa. There are remnants of old Caledonian pine forest, Silene acaulis and Salix lanata are found in montane regions, and there are interesting plants on Ben Lawers, though it takes some effort to get to the top! Agrimonia eupatoria - widespread in southern England - is largely coastal in the north and Scotland, though it is found round some of the larger lochs in Perthshire, which ameliorate the climate. 

Martin & Sally recording on the Shiants
Image: L. Marsh
"The plants themselves provide the earliest records, for example a Bronze Age logboat made from a tall oak. Gaelic culture leaves a residue in place names, with several named for trees, eg Fearna for Alder. The earliest written records date from 1667 when Robert Sibbald and Andrew Balfour established a botanic garden in Edinburgh. Alistair then took us through a chronology of notable botanists formerly active in the region, along with stories of their travels. Charles McIntosh, for example, enthused Beatrix Potter who illustrated some fungi for him".

"Martin Robinson picked up the thread with his talk on The rare plants of Perthshire. He defined rarity by looking at the number of hectads in Perthshire compared to the UK total and took us through his Top 10. Carex vaginata has its stronghold in the central to southern Highlands, so it can be quite common in Perthshire when you are in the right habitat. Carex norvegica is another sedge with a northern centre of distribution. Astragalus alpinus has only five sites in the country, but some may see it on Friday, although in some locations it is declining due to competition from graminoids. In this case lack of grazing may be contributing to the decline. Gentiana nivalis only grows in two areas.  Blue Heath Phyllodoce caerulea was only known to grow in one site and is difficult to find, as it is a shy flowerer and tends to grow with Empetrum nigrum. It is more obvious when in flower. In the 1960s a further site was discovered, so there may be others. 

Tofieldia pusilla
Image: C. Robson
"Kobresia simpliciuscula prefers the band of calcareous ground running through the Highlands, growing in open stony flushes.  It also grows in Upper Teesdale. The next two are both Ben Lawers specialities: Carex atrofusca and Carex microglochin, plants of the high flushes. Schoenus ferrugineus was historically only known around Loch Tummel, but after hydro-electric works that might destroy it some was transplanted, although it only survives at two of these sites, then it was found two new sites. Finally the top rarity was Polygonatum verticilatum which has twelve extant sites, often in gullies on bare leaf litter.  Some of the sites are quite difficult to get to!  There has definitely been a decline, so the RBGE has propagated some from a rhizome and returned it to the wild, where in at least one site it has done well.


"A few other plants might be included, eg Scheuchzeria palustris and Bartsia alpina, though these mostly occur outside Perthshire. There is one calcareous crag which has Oxytropis campestris and Veronica fruticansOxytropis halleri might be seen on Ben Vrackie, along with Cerastium alpinum and Astragalus alpinus. Other rarities include Minuartia rubella, Sedum  villosum, Lychnis visicaria, Carex capillaris, Gentianella amarella, Potentilla krantzii, Tofieldia pusilla and Dactylorhiza incarnata".

Thanks Jon - more to follow!

Friday, 6 June 2014

Simple pleasures

Sisymbrium officinale
Image courtesy of John Crellin
http://www.floralimages.co.uk/
A reminder that you don't always need to travel far to be amazed and enthralled by plants. So, while some of us are living the botanical high-life in Perthshire, we can all enjoy the "weeds" in our local patch, and close observation usually yields something interesting! 

Take a look at this excellent Blogpost by BSBI member Alan, and then see what you think of the hairs on Sisymbrium officinale

And if you think Buddleja davidii Butterfly Bush could hold no surprises for you, try turning the leaf over and look closely with a handlens. You should see the textbook stellate hairs that John Poland talks about, like tiny parasols. A great way to conserve water, if you are a chunky ruderal plant intending to grow out of a wall and not die of thirst :-)