Showing posts with label heather moorland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label heather moorland. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Heather
We walked over the moorland north of Blanchland on the Durham/Northumberland border today, when the blooming of the heather was at its peak. A sea of purple, with golden patches of wavy hair grass and bright green Polytrichum and Sphagnum mosses in the spaces in between.
Labels:
Blanchland,
Calluna vulgaris,
Heather,
heather moorland
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Heather as far as the eye can see
A few pictures of the heather moorland above Blanchland in Northumberland looking fabulous this morning. Surprised to see peacock butterflies nectaring out on the heather.
Labels:
Blanchland,
Heather,
heather moorland
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Lichens
Thursday's Guardian Country Diary explores the wonderful world of lichens that are the brightest objects on moorland in winter. Lichens like .....
...... this delightful Cladonia diversa (?), tipped with what looks like scarlet sealing wax. Those red tips are the apothecia, where microscopic flask-shaped asci shoot their fungal spores out into the breeze. To form another lichen they need to land close enough to the correct alga for the two to form a symbiotic union and develop into a lichen.
This is the moorland described in the Country Diary - a high, windswept path over Birkside Fell above Blanchland, in the Derwent valley on the Durham-Northumberland border. The high rainfall means that nutrients are rapidly leached out of the sandy soil. The area to the right is grouse moor, which from a distance seems like is a sea of dull brown vegetation, until .....
.... you look at what is going on at grouse-eye level, under the canopy of gorse bushes. There, at this time of year, the lichens are at their best and the mosses are actively growing too.
There's a wide range of lichen form and colour. I think this is Cladonia macilenta (?)
..... this looks like Peltigera lactucifolia (?)
.... and this, looking like a forest of tiny golf tees, is Cladonia pyxidata (?)
N.B. the (?) after the specific names mean that these are tentative IDs - I need to check them more carefully to be certain!
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