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Notes on recording mosses and liverworts in churchyards – re Bugbrooke 25th January 2007 by Rachel Carter.
In a county like Northamptonshire with little open countryside churchyards can be an important habitat for all kinds of wildlife, and mosses are no exception. Species which like to live on stone do particularly well, but there is often a good variety of soil- and tree- loving ones as well [although Bugbrooke lacks the latter]. Liverworts tend to need higher moisture levels than mosses so they are relatively less frequent in churchyards. A fairly ordinary churchyard supports a dozen or so bryophytes, richer ones 20–30, and the best -– including Bugbrooke --- 30–40 Bugbrooke churchyard is special because it has two rare mosses.
Racomitrium aciculare is
usually a plant of mountain streams in the north and west of Britain and
is extremely rare in the south-eastern part of the country; there are
several cushions on one of the tombstones at Bugbrooke.
The tiny Tortula marginata is
similar to the common Tortula
muralis [Wall Screw-moss] which grows on many wall-tops, but it
prefers the foot of shaded walls. When
it was found at Bugbrooke this was the first record in the county since
H.N. Dixon found it at Dallington before 1900.
A few local enthusiasts study mosses and liverworts [together known as “bryophytes”], both for their own interest and enjoyment, and to gather data for mapping projects co-ordinated by the British Bryological Society. The website www.britishbryologicalsociety.org.uk is good for more information; click ‘Field Guide’ to get to pictures of many of the commoner species. Mosses and liverworts are best appreciated by looking at them very closely, with a hand lens or a microscope; if you want to do this, choose one which is obviously very plentiful, and even then only take a small piece.
If you want to know more about Mosses and Liverworts including pictures of ones mentioned, go to http://www.britishbryologicalsociety.org.uk |
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