A ripening field of wheat, as harvest time approaches, is an impressive sight - the culmination of 10,000 years of selective plant breeding, aided by the finest agricultural technology that modern science can provide. It's also one of the most hostile environments for native wild flowers.
In winter the soil is ploughed every year and then selective herbicides are used to destroy any wild plant species that manage to germinate. but around the edges of the crop, where the herbicide spray doesn't quite reach, and where there is more light and less competition with the wheat, a select assemblage of annual arable weeds often persists. There presence in arable fields is as old as agriculture itself.
Corn poppy Papaver rhoeas depends on the plough to bring its tiny buried seeds to the surface, exposing them to the light that they need for triggering germination. Most scatter their seeds from their pepper pot seed capsules long before the combine harvester arrives.
Field pansy Viola arvensis is a frequent annual arable seed of crop edges. Its dome-shaped seed capsules split into three boat-shaped segments. They immediately begin to shrink as they dry in the sun, squeezing the seeds - which as smooth and slippery as wet soap - until their are fired out into the surrounding crop.
Most of these arable weeds have small flowers, nonetheless beautiful when you take a close look. This is cut-leaved cranesbill Geranium dissectum. Its tiny flowers are attractive but .....
.... its fruits are exquisite too. Here they are, ripe and ready to go - five seeds each in their own capsule, attracted to a strip of tissue that runs right to the tip of that beak-shaped structure. It becomes as tense as a clock spring as it dries, until the capsules break free and are flicked upwards, hurling out their seeds like a medieval siege catapult.
After the seeds have been discharged the fruits remain attached to the plant, like miniature chandeliers.
Most of these small arable weeds have no impact on crop yield, but sometimes more serious agricultural weeds survive and can become a problem - this is wild oat Avena fatua, whose seeds have a remarkable ability to drill themselves into the soil, which you can see by visiting this post.
Showing posts with label Viola arvensis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Viola arvensis. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Thursday, July 7, 2011
A Visionary Project....
Today's Guardian Country Diary describes a visit to Low Burnhall farm in Durham, now the site of a Woodland Trust major re-foresting scheme and the subject of an earlier blog post about its wonderful display of wild flowers. The photograph above of the farm was taken in spring about five years ago and the one below .....
... was taken from more or less the same spot in late June this year, although with a different focal length lens. The Woodland Trust is in the process of planting 94,000 native trees on this site (including rare black poplars) and the first stage has been to re-seed most of the agriucltural land with grasses and plant up the fields bordering the main road as wild flower meadows.
This year the floral display has been mainly confined to annuals like cornflower, corn poppy and corn chamomile that were sown last autumn, but these meadows also include biennials like viper's bugloss and perennial wild flowers that will make a big impact in future years. The wild flower meadows will be maintained in perpetuity, even after mature woodland develops behind them. Signs in the gateways welcome visitors and although it's the wild flowers that will tempt most people to follow the paths mown through the grasses there are quite a lot of other interesting features too.
The arable weeds like field pansy Viola arvensis that grew amongst the wheat and oilseed rape crops are still there but now the crops are replaced by grasses that support a large population of breeding butterflies like....
... this ringlet.
One of the paths through the grassland leads to this grassy bank between high hedges and rough grassland ...
... where betony...
... and lady's bedstraw are just coming into flower.
The fine old hedges are being extended with new plantings.
The eastern edge of the farm is bordered by the River Wear - with sand martin colonies in its banks and also kingfishers.
Looking northwards you can just make out one of the paths mown through the grassland curving up the distant slope (double-click for a larger image) - visitors are encouraged to wander freely over the site and if you climb to the top of the distant hill there are excellent views to the south.
The River Browney joins the River Wear near the southern boundary, with steep banks that are covered in....
...a dense canopy of butterbur leaves
... and with water crowfoot flowering in the river.
One bank of the River Browney is covered in a fragment of oak wood with some magnificent old trees. This part of the site must look very much like it would have appeared to the first neolithic farmers who arrived here to clear the forest, graze their animals and plant crops over five millennia ago.
Now that deforestation process is being reversed. The site includes important fragments of ancient semi-natural woodland and the new planting, which has already begin with the help of volunteers and schoolchildren, will link these up with a new public-access woodland that will develop over the course of the next century. It will be well worth visiting regularly during the early stages to document progress in this visionary project.
It will be a decade before the woodland grows sufficiently to be recognisable as such and in the meantime most people will probably visit to see the spectacular wild flower display in early summer - and all the bees and butterflies that this attracts.
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