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Snelsmore Common – 7 September 2014

Michael Keith-Lucas led a well-attended walk at Snelsmore Common on the afternoon of Sunday 7th September. The woodland around the car park contains a number of ancient woodland indicator species. One of these, a Crab Apple, had already dropped good numbers of small greenish-yellow fruit onto the surrounding woodland floor. The woods contain a surprising mixture of trees, including lime-loving Whitebeam and acid-loving Rowan. A number of fungi were seen beneath the trees, including Common Earthball, Common Yellow Russula and Amethyst Deceiver. The route led out onto the heath and down the valley into the start of the mire. At the edge was a carpet of yellow Tormentil and Marsh Pennywort, with small round green leaves. As well as the usual pink specimens, there were a few white-flowered Cross-leaved Heath plants. A Common Lizard darted into a dense patch of heather. Descending further into the mire, three different types of Sphagnum moss were identified –red Sphagnum capillifolium, pale straw-coloured S. palustre and green S. fimbriatum. A few specimens of Round-leaved Sundew were found, some with spikes of tiny white flowers. A number of small frogs were seen. Further down the valley was a particularly nutrient-poor section of the mire, fed by springs emerging from below the sandy layers of the Common. Bog Asphodel, Bog Pimpernel, Common Cotton-grass and White Beak-sedge were found here, together with two more types of Sphagnum, the red S. magellicanum and S. denticulatum. A distinctive Crane-fly was photographed and later identified as Pedicia rivosa. More species of Sphagnum were identified, bringing the total for the afternoon to ten. Michael poked a stick into a marshy pool and demonstrated that bubbles of methane were released.

Leaving the mire behind, the route climbed up onto drier ground on the side of the valley. There was some speculation as to which creature might have constructed the numerous small round holes in the sandy path. A Small Copper butterfly and two young Slow-worms were seen here. The grey-green lichen Cladonia fimbriata, with small cup-like fruits, was abundant on the ground amongst the heather. A Blusher was spotted beneath a Silver Birch at the top of the ridge. Michael pointed out the abrupt edge of the Bracken which marked the boundary between the sands of the Reading Beds and the overlying gravel. The rhizomes of the Bracken can spread easily through sandy soils, but not through gravel. Bell Heather put on a fine display at the top of the Common. There were several large hairy ginger and black Fox Moth caterpillars and Bilberry was also seen here.

Pictures by Sue White and Laurie Haseler

RDNHS trip to Snelsmore Common, 7.9.14, led by Michael Keith-Lucas
Plant species, including ferns and mosses
Malus sylvestris Crab Apple
Persicaria hydropiper Water-pepper
Sorbus aria Common Whitebeam
Sorbus aucuparia Rowan
Castanea sativa Sweet Chestnut
Calluna vulgaris Heather
Potentilla erecta Tormentil
Hydrocotyle vulgaris Marsh Pennywort
Lythrum portula Water-purslane
Juncus bulbosus Bulbous Rush
Juncus effusus Soft-rush
Juncus conglomeratus Compact Rush
Juncus acutiflorus Sharp-flowered Rush
Sphagnum palustre
Erica tetralix Cross-leaved Heath
Dactylorhiza maculata Heath Spotted-orchid
Betula pendula Silver Birch
Betula pubescens Downy Birch
Molinia caerulea Purple Moor-grass
Erica cinerea Bell Heather
Drosera rotundifolia Round-leaved Sundew
Blechnum spicant Hard Fern
Narthecium ossifragum Bog Asphodel
Eriophorum angustifolium Common Cottongrass
Anagallis tenella Bog Pimpernel
Sphagnum magellanicum
Salix repens Creeping Willow
Sphagnum capillifolium ssp rubellum
Polygala serpyllifolia Heath Milkwort
Sphagnum inundatum
Sphagnum fimbriatum
Sphagnum denticulatum
Sphagnum cuspidatum
Sphagnum papillosum
Sphagnum subnitens
Sphagnum fallax
Aulacomnium palustre
Juncus bufonius Toad Rush
Deschampsia flexuosa Wavy Hair-grass
Viola palustris Marsh Violet
Pteridium aquilinum Bracken
Teucrium scorodonia Wood Sage
Vaccinium myrtilis Bilberry
Veronica officinalis Heath Speedwell
Aira praecox Early Hair-grass
Agrostis tenuis Common Bent
Fungi
Scleroderma citrinum Common Earthball
Laccaria amethystina Amethyst Deceiver
Russula ochroleuca Common Yellow Russula
Amanita rubescens The Blusher
Vertebrates
Lacerta vivipara Common Lizard
Rana temporaria Common Frog
Anguis fragilis Slow-worm
Insects
Lycaena phlaeas Small Copper
Pedicia rivosa
Macrothylacia rubi Fox Moth

List by Renée Grayer, Sue White and Jan Haseler