4 May 2009

Dothill, Granville & Tweedale Surveys

Bluebells courtesy of Lis Dalby

April 24th saw us at Dothill for the first Wrekin Forest Volunteers survey of 2009.

I thought I hadn't visited this area before but on arrival I realised I'd travelled right through the centre of it a few months back when I walked part of the Silkin Way from Bratton to Apley Castle but a full day surveying the wildlife was a far better prospect than merely walking through!

As a wildlife site it scores high on so many grounds; ponds, open spaces and woodland juxtapose comfortably with each other offering diverse habitats and scope for investigation especially when crawling on all-fours holding a field-glass!

Pond-dipping was something many of us hadn't done before and I have to say we all found it fascinating. What surprised me was that life exists in the most unlikely places; scrape the bottom of a very murky pond with a net, deposit contents into tray, wait a minute or so and the whole thing comes alive!

On arrival at the outskirts of Pond 1, and whilst the scouts led by Pete forged a way through the undergrowth, we were blessed with a dozen or more Speckled Woods excitedly flitting around an apple tree. Fabulous sight!

Photo by Keith Fowler

There were also patches of the beautiful Lady's Smock...

Photo by Nigel Cane-Honeysett

Much more to be done with identifying wild flowers, trees, insects, birds, woodlice, spiders etc etc. Lots of records have now been sent to Pete for submission into the Trust database using the spreadsheet template (there's a copy in the yahoo group forum if you want to download one for yourself for future recording).

A week later on May 1st saw another great day blessed mostly with sunshine although clouding over slightly in the afternoon for our trip to Granville. This was actually planned as a much larger area to survey going as far north as Muxton Marshes but we all seemed to get way-laid with so much to see and record even as we clambered out of the bus - so much more to do in the surrounding areas.

Having only visited Granville Nature Reserve a couple of times before I found a deeper delve was particularly interesting and again a diverse habitat worthy of further exploration.

One of the many interesting insects we came across was a Cuckoo Bee which mimics the bird of the same name, not by flying around singing cuckoo, buzz, cuckoo, buzz I may add, but by virtue of the fact that it lays its eggs in another bumble bee hive and doesn't even thank them for looking after their brood.

May 8 saw us tripping the light fantastic in Tweedale Wood.

A rather unique area seemingly squashed between an industrial estate and a caravan park but a a fascinating place with lots of plant and creature potential. One of the first plants recorded was a spotted orchid of type yet unknown until it flowers.

And a day-flying moth caught in the net again remains unidentified as yet but in the meantime Les has christened it Elvis as it appears to be wearing a gold lame coat (that's not 'lame' by the way - should have an accent over the 'e' but can't seem to find one anywhere!).


And then there was this strange thingy on a silver birch tree...

Photo by Rhys Perry

I was convinced that it was that old favourite; the Face-Mask Fungus but with due diligence Rhys managed to correctly ID it. This short report has been lifted from the forum;-

Enteridium lycoperdon - is a fairly common species of slime mould, and is typically seen on standing dead trees in the spring, or on large pieces of fallen wood. Alder is a common host; the slime mould emerges from beetle holes in the bark.
Rhys


Thanks for the heads up on a great fungi ID website too Rhys with Visual Fungi Have added this as a link on the sidebar for everyone's future reference. Great site!

We were also very fortunate to get a rare sighting of the very elusive Wood Goose - possibly the first in the UK...
Obviously searching in vain for a mate as he has a little tear falling from his eye. Ahhhh.

Where Is It Competition

I thought I'd occasionally drop in a competition pic offering one of my hugely popular prizes from my little box of everything. I don't think this will prove too difficult for anyone but as my long-standing friend Vera Wayfromer says 'it's the early nerd that catches the tern'.

You'll never know whether you're in first though as I'll be withholding all answers for a few days! Pop your answers in 'Comments' at the bottom of this post.

Caption competition
No prizes for this one and apologies to Graham and Jenny but I just couldn't resist it! Suitably silly suggestions for a caption in Comments below please. Thanks to both for permission to publish.

Garden Moth Scheme

As Nigel's porch-trapping seems to have dried-up for the time being Les and I are enjoying getting slightly ahead of the game!

The numbers in my moth trap are never very great but occasionally a little gem pops in to say hello. Last Friday saw my first Brimstone moth in the trap.

Just 7 moths across 7 species caught including a Scalloped Hazel, Pebble Hook Tip and a Flame Shoulder so a nice small neat little mix - as is this week's slideshow

Click the collage to view the slideshow

5 comments:

  1. The mystery location looks like the amphitheatre in the Town park to me. (One day I'll win one of Paul's weird prizes).

    How about "Pope in mufti for surprise visit to Telford" for the caption competition?

    Anyone had any joy id'ing Elvis?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Comment forwarded from Les

    How about "Pope in mufti for surprise visit to Telford" for the caption competition?

    Anyone had any joy id'ing Elvis?

    Les

    ReplyDelete
  3. I just pinched the photo of Elvis and put it on Wildaboutbritain, and got an immediate ID. (Those people really know their stuff). Elvis is Adela reaumurella - a moth, as you said Paul.

    BTW, try START, PROGRAMS, ACCESSORIES, SYSTEM TOOLS, CHARACTER MAP, and you can get an é with an accent.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Paul
    Your piccy competition.... Telford Town Park... the little auratorium /stage overlooking Randley Pool , with stone steps leading down to it. In need of long overdue maintainance ( which hopefully is finally being carried out)to make it safe to use once again.
    Lis D

    ReplyDelete
  5. Well done Les - I tried but obviously not hard enough!

    Here's a link to an online pic of Elvis the Moth:-

    http://bit.ly/ELVIS

    ReplyDelete

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