Friday, 15 May 2020
Geranium species
I looked at the Geranium species along the Access trail which I think I had classified as G. dissectum in the past. I toyed today with this ID, thinking this plant to be G. columbinum, the long stalked cranesbill. However a quick use of the hand-lens indicated glandular hairs on the old style at least. The fruits are also hairy.
There is also plenty of G. dissectum around already - its extremely common as an arable field weed in the Oil Seed Rape fields on the Fairlawne Estate, where I feel it presents very differently.
Friday, 8 May 2020
Winter Cress, Barbarea
The Fairlawne field just before the Cricket Bat Willow plantation has thousands of a Barbarea plant on it, about 25 - 30 cm high.
The fruit \are curved initially but appear to straighten up and also become more appressed when mature.
The styles may lengthen slightly as the fruit mature, but the longest one I measured was still no more than 2 mm long. Equally the longest fruit I have measured so far was no more than 40 mm, (4 cm).The pedicel was stou, definitely not more slender than the fruits themselves.
The flowers were about 5 mm when measured across, with the petals about twice the length of the sepals,
The uppermost leaves were quite lobed at the base, so it is unlikely to be B. vulgaris or B. stricta.
The leaves tasted quite sour, so it is unlikely to be B. verna.
Sunday, 3 May 2020
Crepis vesicaria var. taraxacifolia. The Beaked Hawkweed.
Ecology: A usually biennial herb, sometimes annual or perennial, of lightly mown or grazed grassland on roadsides, lawns, railway banks and in waste places. Lowland.
Status: Neophyte
Trends: In Britain, this species was first recorded in 1713 in Kent. It spread rapidly, reaching the west coast of Ireland in 1896. It is now the commonest yellow composite in flower on roadsides in S. Britain and S. Ireland in May. It has failed to spread far into N. England, and the first authentic record from Co. Durham was not made until 1951. There are many more records in W. England, Wales and Ireland than in the 1962 Atlas.
World Distribution: Native of the Mediterranean region and S.W. Asia.
Found on the A26 verge opposite the college entrance. Look for the basal purple flushing, the orange striping on the outside of the petals, and the general downiness of the plant.
Friday, 10 April 2020
Thursday, 9 April 2020
Andrena sp burrow
Amazing burrow of one of the mining bees, Andrena sp. Found in their 100s on the path surface on Fairlawne land.
Wednesday, 18 March 2020
Birch woodwart
In Dene Park the other day I came across a medium-small standing Birch trunk with lots of these brown to black lumpy fruiting bodies bursting out of its bark. This is the Birch Woodwart, Annulohypoxylon multiforme, aka Jackrogersella multiformis, a fungus in the Pyrenomycete group of Ascomycetes, most commonly noted on Birch although it occurs on a range of deciduous trees. Another species of Dickrogersella exists in two different forms, on Beech and Oak respectively.
The fruiting body is rather formless at first, often an ochre-brown in colour, and as it ages it darkens, and starts to form these multiple black perithechial bumps, with papillate (sometimes in a little depression) ostioles or spore-releasing holes. It would be interesting to do a cross-section to see the perithecia.
http://pyrenomycetes.free.fr/hypoxylon/html/Hypoxylon_multiforme.htm
https://www.nina.no/english/Fields-of-research/Projects/Pyrenomycetes
Tuesday, 25 February 2020
Exidia thuretiana (Lev.) Fr.
In Dene Park, on the edge of the first Beech compartment I turned over a small branch and on the damp underside pressed against the soil surface I found what I think is the White Brain Fungus, Exidia thuretiana. This photo, in natural light gives us some slightly blue and pinkish tones.
This closer photograph was flash assisted, but aperture controlled. It takes the tones out.
Here is another flash-enhanced sample. I think its fair to say that the margin is quite distinct here as expected, and the ridges are also at right angles to the margin, at least of the edge of the material.
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