Saturday 21 December 2013

Greetings on this the shortest day

November started with the now annual visit to the National Trust for Scotland’s Haddo Christmas Fair where Janet’s tweed crafts were on display for the public to buy.  Despite the gales and rain for part of the weekend good numbers of folk turned up to see the various stalls and crafts and Janet was reasonably pleased with the number of bags, scarves and cards sold.  Once again daughter Laura and Douglas did us proud by providing accommodation and good food and Laura using her ex-Next manager skills when
Beautiful kitchen
helping out on the stall.  Both had also been working hard to apply the finishing touches to their new kitchen in time for the Haddo weekend and what a brilliant space for cooking and dining they have created, something to be truly proud of.  While Janet was selling I was again poking around in the estate woodlands, though the Saturday afternoon searches had to be done under an umbrella meaning it was just too wet to photograph the stinkhorn fungus (Phallus impudicus) and the bluing bracket fungus (Postia caesia) on a couple of dead conifers.  The latter fungus is cursed by the timber industry because, as the name implies, once present the timber under the bark is stained blue by growing fungus and though the wood isn’t weakened the blue colour implies the opposite and affects the saleability of the sawn timber.  Returning to Haddo on the Sunday morning the wind was up to gale force and it was interesting to note that only one of
Janet's Haddo Stall
the many wind turbines was turning, but no doubt the owner was still being paid vast sums of money.  Odd that we don’t get paid anything when the sun doesn’t shine on our solar panels!  Let’s not go there!  Wishing Laura and Janet well for the day I headed off to an old bit of mixed woodland I had spotted the day before just on the edge of the estate.  Monster elms mixed with beech, spruce and sycamores, though about half the elms were in the dying phase possibly as a result of Dutch elm disease.  The elms were searched for the presence of the lichen Gyalecta ulmi a once regular species found on shaded bases of old elms but now quite rare due to ravages of Dutch elm disease.  None was found but a fallen sycamore branch was covered
Glistening inkcap fungus on sycamore branch
with a mass of the orange coloured fruiting bodies of the glistening inkcap (Copinellus micaceus) and the small, coral-pink cushion-like fruiting bodies of the coral spot (Nectria cinnabarina) a regular fungus of decaying branches.  In a dark crevice on one of the elms I noticed several pinhead lichens growing from a very green, granular thallus (the body of the lichen containing the fungus and algae) and not knowing which species it was a small sample of bark, with lichen, was removed for checking.  Once home, a day later, I had a look at the pinhead under the microscope and was amazed to find a couple of small flies wandering around on the lichen, occasionally hiding in wee cracks but not making any effort to fly away – interesting.  Whilst at
The barkfly Ectopsocus petersi
rest I was able to obtain a few photos which I emailed to expert Stephen for advice and was informed that they were a couple of barkflies belonging to the insect order Psocoptera, an outdoor version of something called booklice which occur indoors.  From the photos Stephen offered the name Ectopsocus petersi but couldn’t be 100% certain without actually seeing one of them.  Whilst checking the name and lifestyle of barkflies amazingly I came across the National Barkfly Recording Scheme and organiser Keith offered to look at one of the flies to confirm identification and also to add the specimen to the collection.  A few days later and the name was confirmed as Ectopsocus petersi highlighting the brilliance of local recorder Stephen.  The identity of the pinhead lichen is awaited but looks like one of the Chaenotheca species possibly trichialis.

Once back from Haddo Janet set up the Firwood Chalet as a mini-craft shop and for two weeks opened on a daily basis.  A percentage of all sales was donated to the local branch of the charity Macmillan Care.  The same day I attended a liaison meeting between Badenoch and Strathspey Conservation Group (BSCG) and a couple of the Cairngorm National Park staff regarding their Nature Action Plan and visited the newly
Nethy village walks
created paths in woodland in the village to help provide ideas for interpretation boards to be installed in a couple of places along the paths.  Ongoing visits were also made to the proposed An Camus Mor “new town” of up to 1500 houses adjacent to Aviemore to record species that might help with the legal challenge to try and stop the development, currently going through the courts.  A boost to funds for this appeal came from Lush Cosmetics, the ethical and campaigning cosmetics company who donated £7000 to try and protect the Cairngorms National Park from housing developers (see link below).  An ongoing concern about
Puccinia caricina fungus on leaves of common sedge
this development is the poor quality of some of the environmental surveys giving conservationists the impression that this development, which has the full backing of the SNP dominated Scottish Parliament, will go ahead whatever is found on site.  Under freedom of information requests details of these surveys has now been released to BSCG and on checking the bird data we find that the surveyor recorded reed warbler (unheard of this far north) and makes a case for habitat creation for kingfisher and grasshopper warbler in a
Puccinia caricina spores x1000
site currently dominated by woodland!  Sorry, I digress.  During my site visit I recorded big-billed crossbills (Scottish or parrott crossbill and absent from the survey) and the tall delicate pipe club fungus (Macrotyyphula fistulosa).  By a woodland pool I came across a fungus growing on common sedge (Carex nigra) leaves which looks to be Puccinia caricina var. paludosa, not recorded locally, but overall nothing too spectacular was found.  Visits will continue to see what else is on site, particularly in the bird line.  Whilst the local recorder was away on holiday I also visited a local hen harrier roost site to see how many birds flew in for the night, but nothing appeared despite watching the site until darkness made viewing i
Too dark to see - checking hen harrier roost
mpossible and the moon starting to appear over the hills.  Quite a sad count really.  In the past up to seven birds have been recorded but dropping down to just one to three in recent years.  The roosting birds have almost always been “brown” birds either females or juveniles but whether breeders from the local area or visiting wintering birds we just don’t know.  If these are local birds, then the trend is quite worrying.

An email from Andy at Abernethy NNR mid-month required investigation.  An RSPB staff member had been driving along a road a couple of miles from the edge of the reserve and had noticed many trees in one section of woodland near to Nethybridge had brown tops and wondered whether one of the many diseases threatening our native trees was in the forest.  The other option offered by Andy was it might be something to
The 10 areas bought over 25 years to
create the RSPB Abernethy NNR
do with beetles, so time to go and have a look.  When this section of woodland was bought by RSPB in 1994 (pink area on map) it had previously been managed as a commercially productive forest by a pension fund, with large blocks of the woodland comprising closely planted and even aged trees.  Whilst ideal for producing tall, straight trees of good saleable quality, the biodiversity value of the woodland was quite low; much of the woodland lacked any invertebrate rich ground vegetation, and, with tiny crowns, the trees were lacking branch development and hence cone production.  After some initial survey work a plan was put in
Scots pine shoots on ground
place to irregularly thin the woodland to create diversity in tree density and encourage plant growth.  Because of the size of the woodland this had to be done using modern, forestry machinery comprising timber harvesters and forwarders to fell and extract the timber, but the harvester was also used to create standing deadwood by lopping off the tops of some trees as it progressed through the woodland.  To monitor change I undertook monthly bird surveys of the main woodland area being managed using a fixed 100 metre grid to ensure that the birds were recorded at the same “points” on each visit – hence the term “point counts”.  Visits were made in the early morning and at each point (50 of them) birds were recorded for a period of
Pine shoot beetle hole in Scots pine shoot
five minutes before moving on to the next one.  This survey continued for six years but analysis revealed that this is probably too short a time period in the life of a forest to see any major change.  It might take 10-15 years for the forest floor vegetation to respond significantly and dead trees created by the harvester would also take a similar time to provide suitable “soft” wood for birds to excavate nest sites, so recording might be repeated every 10 or so years.  During the development of the management planning process another major decision was taken, and a halt was called on any “extractive” management of the timber resource; all future thinning would be by deadwood creation, pulling over a few trees, ring-barking and high-topping to create standing deadwood.  Whilst being somewhat artificial, this management would address one of the major
The pine shoot beetle Tomicus piniperda inside pine shoot
problems with all our “native/natural” woodlands, a lack of deadwood.  And so, a couple of years ago, a timber harvester was used to re-visit the previously thinned areas and work its way through the trees creating deadwood (standing and lying) as it went.  The creation of so much freshly dead timber worked particularly well for one invertebrate – the large pine shoot beetle (also known as the pine bark beetle), and as I wandered through the section of woodland where the tops of the trees had been seen to be browning, I
Pine shoot beetle galleries as found under bark on felled tree.
Some larvae still present (coloured white)
could see that I probably wouldn’t need to check the pine needles I had been collecting under the microscope.  All through the managed area there were pine shoots (the very tips of the branches) lying on the ground and in the central, woody portion of most shoots there was a tiny hole. By carefully pulling the shoot apart I was able to find the answer to the problem – Tomicus piniperda – the large pine shoot beetle, though at 4mm in length, large it certainly wasn’t!  The creation of standing and lying deadwood had turned
Pine shoot beetle exit holes in pine bark
the woodland into pine shoot beetle paradise and in the year the trees had been managed, beetles had landed on the fallen timber and immediately dug their way through the bark to lay their eggs between bark and tree sap-wood.  The new generation of beetles then emerged through new holes in the bark and then looked for a safe place to spend the winter months (in the pine shoots) before looking once again for breeding sites (new deadwood) in the spring.  During windy winter days the point where the beetle has entered the pine shoot becomes vulnerable to snapping and hence many end up on the ground where they continue to live quite happily until the next spring.  There is always a surge in the numbers of these beetles after any conifer thinning
The pouched false morel fungus
Gyromitra infula
work so what has happened here isn’t unusual but perhaps the quantity of deadwood created should be re-assessed before more thinning work is carried out.  It looked like as many as a thousand beetles per log could have been emerging during both of the last two springs meaning tens of thousands of beetles on the lookout for homes for winter.  A bonus, as often happens on these outings was finding a couple of fruiting bodies of one of the late autumn/early winter pouched false morels (Gyromitra infula) a third record for Abernethy and with only 53 records on the UK fungal records database.

A first flurry of snow on 19 November had the garden birds demanding a bit more food so the first of the monster fat cakes were produced and put out.  A chance glance out of the utility room window a day earlier spotted one of those rare winter bird moments as I noticed a male blackcap feeding amongst some spilt birdseed in front of the chalet. It disappeared before Janet saw it.  I should have assembled the camera and
Look hard & there is a male blackcap on right of photo
telephoto right away because a few minutes later Janet shouted say it was back, this time in the cotoneaster hedge where it struggled to swallow a nice red seed, food the blackbirds had been making use of a few days earlier.  The blackcap then appeared on the trellis right outside the window and my annoyance at not having put the camera and lens together grew enormously.  It stopped long enough to devour a honeysuckle seed
Female bullfinch in rowan tree
before returning to the cotoneaster hedge where I just about managed to capture a photo with the standard lens camera.  And that was it, hopes of a wintering blackcap diminished as there were no more sightings by the end of the month.  With the telephoto lens now in place a few other birds posed for the camera, dunnocks in the flowerbox, blackbird in the cotoneaster hedge and chaffinch in the snow on the trellis. A
Blackbird in rowan tree
female bullfinch was snapped as it wandered around the rowan tree looking for any remaining berries.  As the snow eased and the thoughts of frost loomed I dug up the last of the tatties, red roosters and white maris pipers, quite a nice crop and something to think about planting again next year.  On my outing to the hen harrier roost I noticed in passing, an old quarry by one of the tracks and, knowing how good the occasional one has been for unusual species I thought a return visit would be worthwhile.  The relatively mild weather of November ensured that quite a few fungi continued to appear so I found it hard not to pop in and out of the
The waxcap Hygrocybe lacmus
birches as I made my way to the quarry.  A few more fruiting bodies of the pipe club fungus were found and a rake around in the fallen leaves managed to turn up its close but diminutive relative the slender club (Macrotyphula juncea).  There was even a fly agaric still fully resplendent with red cap and white dots.  The old quarry produced a couple of Peltigera lichens and as I wandered back and forth a small bluish fungus caught my eye.  First appearances made me think of a waxcap, but so late and not in grassland?  The
Hygrocybe lacmus about 65mm high & cap 25mm diameter
camera was set up and a few in situ photos were taken and when I found there were about six fruiting bodies I took one home to check the spores.  Under the microscope the spores were easily found and the brilliant book The Genus Hygrocybe by David Boertmann, lead me to either Hygrocybe russocoriacea or H. lacmus settling eventually (with a little help from expert Liz) for H. lacmus (Schumach.) P.D. Orton & Watling, an amazing little waxcap with a bluish grey cap and spores in the range 7x6ยต.  Once again the name of Peter D. Orton appeared linking the man who did so much recording work at Abernethy was also the first to describe this particular fungus.  Brilliant.

November ended with the Highland Biological Recording Groups AGM with yours truly added to the committee.  Laura popped over for the day as Janet and myself looked after the two older grandchildren for a couple of nights allowing Ruth, Lewis and Harry a long weekend in Edinburgh.  We even did the school and playgroup run on the Monday getting home mid-afternoon to a welcome cup of tea followed by something a little stronger!

25 years ago, as I type, was a day we will never forget.  On the 21 December 1988 I said cheerio to my assistant warden Richard as he headed off south to be with family and friends over Christmas.  Just after 7pm the radio and TV channels were interrupted to inform us of the horrors just unleashed on the tiny village of Lockerbie and surrounding countryside.  Thankfully Richard had passed the village a few hours earlier and unlike those caught up in the terrorist atrocity was able to spend the festive season with his family. 

As I have been typing this, supposedly in winter and on the shortest day, a small black dot between my fingers has turned out to be A TICK!  Do these wee blighters not have a few months off each year?

Enjoy the read and best wishes for the festive period and 2014.
Stewart and Janet

Fungal Record Database of Britain & Ireland
Lush Cosmetics article
National Barkfly Recording Scheme
Waxcaps

 
Pine cone & friends
A misty morning at Loch Mallachie
Bristle haircap moss Polytricum piliferum
 
The slender club Macrotyphula juncea


Photos © Stewart Taylor

Wednesday 20 November 2013

We were all off on an autumn holiday

As I prepared to write this diary the solemness of the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month was upon us.  Our TV screens were also starting to fill with the horrors of the devastation wreaked in the Philippines by Typhoon Haiyan, raising the city of Tacloban to the ground and killing thousands of people.  As the eleventh hour approached I headed out, parking the car by the road to Lurg Farm on the outskirts of
Nethybridge to have a short walk and as Big Ben started to chime eleven times I had the place to myself with a view out towards the cloud covered Cairngorms.  What a contrast.  Ninety nine years ago millions of Brits were about to loose their lives in Europe and in the Philippines millions of folk were seeking food and water just to stay alive.  And me?  I was about to walk the length of a recently installed deer fence to see if any birds had collided with it and you start to think that there are bigger things in this world to worry about.  I hope you all bought your poppy and sent your donation to the DEC appeal.

October started with a search for a new laptop, my trusty old Dell Inspiron was starting to need repairs, was running slow and, from April next year, Microsoft will no longer be supporting the simple to use Windows XP software installed on it.  So, it was time to bite the bullet and upgrade(?) to a newer, faster machine and the horrors of having to learn to use Windows 7.  The purchase though was timely and the new laptop was pressed straight into use to assist with a talk to a local history group, the new laptop having the ability to “talk” to the PowerPoint projector, something my old machine refused to do.  Progress! 

At the end of September a very worrying event took place just up the road from Firwood, a section of the Abernethy Reserve caught fire.  I was just driving back down the road towards home when I realised I could smell smoke and just at the same time, Ian, one of the reserve staff was also just about to park up to see what was where.  Another member of staff was already in the trees trying to find the fire and an argocat (an
off road 8-wheeled vehicle) with water bowser and mist sprayers was on its way, as was the local fire brigade, who I met as I made my way to the Mondhuie Wood entrance.  As I parked up I was just quick enough to grab a few photos of the second fire engine arriving before setting off to follow an old timber extraction route towards the fire, hoping that someone would have a spare fire beater once I got there.  I didn’t think it appropriate to take my camera so sadly, this was left behind.  At the fire site John and Sandy from the village were already tackling the fire with cut sections of juniper bushes, the argocat had just arrived and generally, the fire was reasonably quickly brought under control, just as well, as there were no spare fire beaters to help bash out the flames which continued to flare up in some areas.  John and Sandy had seen the smoke from their houses and had phoned RSPB and the fire brigade before setting off.  Despite the dryish weather of September, the fire wasn’t roaring away and was generally confined to an area of dampish ground probably no more than a hectare in size.  However, it looked like it had been burning in the peat for a couple of days before “taking off” and that
Fire scarred trees
it had originated from an overnight campfire which hadn’t been properly extinguished.  A lucky escape.  As I looked around I could see one large wood ant nest in the middle of the burnt area hadn’t been so lucky and was smouldering away quite badly, meaning the nest would have to be flattened to ensure no smouldering embers remained.  How I wished I had brought my camera, if only to record the loss of the nest.  However, I thought back to another fire in another part of Abernethy in the mid-1980s where a large ant nest had been burnt and amazingly, though the nest was destroyed, the ants survived, so it would be interesting to visit this one again once the fire had been fully extinguished.  The Abernethy staff were on site for a couple of days until they were happy the last smouldering embers had been dealt with and it
The Sickener (Russula emetica)
was a few days after that before I returned to see what remained of the ants nest.  Despite the blackened Scots pine trunks and burnt vegetation, there were already signs that the tussocks of cotton grass had started to recover, and a brilliantly red cap of the fungus The Sickener (Russula emetica) had appeared from the charred embers.  More amazing, was the scurrying activity of wood ants, working feverishly to re-build their nest in the hollowed out crater, the only obvious evidence that remained of their once magnificent nest.  In just a few days the ants had already assembled a small mound, which, hopefully, could be added to over the next six to eight weeks to provide a mini-dome capable of shedding the worst of the winter weather.  So how had they survived?  The burnt nest was quite large and hence old, measuring four feet across the base of the mound, and estimated to have been about three foot in height.  Although we see the mass of twigs and needles that make up the nest above ground, another part of the nest
The 4' diameter base of burnt ant nest with new build just visible
goes well underground, providing the ants with reasonably secure accommodation for the winter months.  The mound above would shed the water and snow and the underground section would probably be maintained at a few degrees warmer than the surrounding air on cold days.  So, despite the fire removing the “nest”, many ants, including queens would have survived below ground and with the RSPB folk removing most of the smouldering nest, this would have stopped the fire from burning down into the ground as it had done in other sections of the woodland.  Some ants would have also survived by being out collecting nest material and food, the latter often from high in the surrounding trees. So, as soon as it was safe to emerge the surviving ants started doing what ants do best, nest building, and though many ants would have perished, those that had survived would be having a good go at producing as much of a thatch before the
Typical size of 4' diameter ant nest
worst of the winter weather arrives.  One major aspect of the ants lives that would have been disrupted though, would be their immediate food supply, comprising the many small insects, including aphids, that the ants scour the surrounding vegetation and trees to find.  Only time will tell, but on my last visit just a few days ago the old nest crater had a mound several inches high in its centre and though work has now stopped for the winter they may just have been able to do enough to allow the fire survivors to see the first warm days in February 2014.  Fingers crossed and watch this space.

The 6th October was quite a nice day in Nethybridge, the sun was out and there was a bit of breeze so it seemed the right sort of day to go and have a last look for alpine bearberry (Arctostaphylos alpinus), the nice red-leaved plant which featured last month.  This plant has yet to be found on the RSPBs Abernethy Reserve so I thought one last big effort to a series of tops forming the boundary of the reserve with the
The days outing, both tops
Forestry Commission in Glenmore might produce the goods.  I decided the best way to the top of Craiggowrie would be from Tulloch Moor and I had warned Janet that if everything went well, I might need a lift back to my car from the Glenmore cafรฉ.  As I made my way across the Glac Mor flats below the steep climb up Craiggowrie I started to doubt that I had made the right decision as the wind was starting to blow quite strongly and I had hardly started to ascend.  Willow trees were checked for galls and lichens as I passed them and the wet flush I was following upwards produced one or two different plants worthy of note.  Somewhere along its length there is an old record of bog orchid, and though most suitable sites were checked, nothing was found.  Eventually the ridge well west of the summit of Craiggowrie was reached and I had a job to stand up and when I reached the summit I was glad of the shelter that comprised part of the summit cairn and decided this was the best place to have lunch, but all the extra layers of waterproofs would be needed to try and fend off the wind.  Over lunch I made a note of a couple of lichens on the rocks and took out my GPS to show the location.  I then realised that Craiggowrie and the
Tulloch, Lochs Mallachie & Garten
from Craiggowrie
ridge beyond was a bit below the 700m contour, something I should have checked on the map before setting off rather than relying on out of date memories!  Lunch over I headed out along the ridge checking any suitable looking bits of habitat for the bearberry, but nothing looked quite right.  The ridge path took me down into a hollow and up onto next rocky knoll which just got me into the 700m height, but without a single suitable bit of bearberry habitat in sight.  The aim from here was to have progressed on to Creagan Gorm and Meall a’ Bhuachaille before heading down to the cafรฉ at Glenmore but with the wind trying to part me from my waterproofs it was time to bale out and head back toward Tulloch and my car.  All was not lost though as I was able to head north out onto another rocky outcrop before heading down via the Craiggowrie Burn an area I had never visited before, and
The lichen Alectoria ochroleuca
Delbog and then to the car.  As I reached the rocky outcrop something in my head was reminding me that I might be in an area where the rare mountain lichen Alectoria ochroleuca had been found in the recent past, despite the area being well below its usual altitudinal range.  Just as well I had remembered because after finding the first small patch of this creeping, thin branched lichen, more and more patches started to appear, the subtle yellow colour distinguishing it from other similar looking lichens on site.  Alectoria comes from the Greek for ‘hair’ and that is just how the lichen appears as it sits there in a slightly tangled yellowish mass on the short vegetation.  My GPS informed me that I was at around 670m, almost 100m below where you
Rock Art Craiggowrie Burn
would normally expect to find it.  And then the hard downhill slog began, walking through deep, tussocky vegetation all the way down the burn and beyond.  The burn with its mainly Scots pine woodland was interesting but didn’t produce anything out of the ordinary and it was with great relief that the track from Delbog was reached and normal walking could be resumed.  Halfway along the track I met Sally who thought I must be absolutely mad to have tackled Craiggowrie by the route I had taken.  Lesson learnt, and with only seven entries of notables in my diary for the day, not the most productive of outings.

Another outing took place which lead to a bit of deer dung related work!  A couple of water beetle recorders (Garth and Don) were visiting the Abernethy Forest area to check sites where the unusual beetle Agabus (now Ilybius) wasastjernea had been found in the past.  This beetle that made an entry onto the British beetle list originally as a fossil record, only to be found alive, in 1991, following some pitfall tapping work linked to capercaillie research, in Abernethy Forest.  The original “find” came about after I had ensured that all beetle specimens, once counted as potential bulk prey items available to capercaillie, were sent to a
Garth & Don the water beetle survey team
beetle expert, John Owen.  John had been undertaking surveys as a volunteer at Abernethy for the previous twelve years.  The find created a bit of excitement in the world of water beetles, and following the original identification by John and subsequent searching in the forest to find the habitat occupied, a paper was produced for the Entomologist's Record, Vol. 104, in October l992, titled “Agabus wasastjernae - Sahlberg (Col.: Dytiscidae) New To Scotland, by Owen, Lyszkowski, Proctor and Taylor.”  Sadly, I’ve been unable to find a link to this paper that is easily accessible on the internet, so a short excerpt is given below, prรฉcised a little to save space.
Sub-fossil history in BritainWhile these specimens of A. wasastjernae are the first to be recorded from Scotland and the first to be recorded in Britain for historic times, examination of sub-fossil deposits have shown that the species lived in Britain in the past.  Coope (1959) examining Pleistocene deposits from
Current UK distribution of
Ilybius (Agabus) wasasjernae
Chelford, Cheshire, found fragments of a number of specimens of A. wasastjernae along with fragments of ten other water beetles of the family Dytiscidae, of which eight are among those we found in searching for specimens of the Agabus in Abernethy.  These deposits were dated by 14. C (carbon dating) as were deposits from Church Stretton, Shropshire, where more fragments of the beetle had been found.  These deposits gave a 14. C date of 8101 ± 138 years B.P.  Since most of Britain has been free from glaciation since that time there is every reason to suppose that A. wasastjernae has had a continuous presence in Britain in the past for at least 8000 years, becoming a northern species as its required habitat became extinguished in the south. Examination of sub-fossil deposits has demonstrated the presence in Britain in the past of many beetle species which are present in Britain today but this is apparently the first instance in which a beetle was known from such deposits in Britain some years before it was discovered in Britain alive.”  
    Despite the publicity generated by this find there have been few records for the beetle since the early 1990s and the reason for the current visit was to see if it could be found in a couple of its old haunts.  Knowing the location of the 1991 site and having found the beetle there and in other locations since, I was invited along to help with the search.  Sadly, the dry summer meant that there was hardly any water in the
Chickweed wintergreen &
seed head by pools
root holes where the beetle had previously been found and the only bit of evidence it had been there was a single wing case or elytra.  However, Garth was also keen to check groups of red deer droppings for a species of dung beetle - Cercyon borealis, which had yet to be recorded in Britain.  More about deer droppings shortly.  By the side of the last root hole we checked another very small insect caught my eye which Garth suggested might be a shore bug, a group he didn’t know intimately, so the specimen was popped in a tube to be looked at once I got home.  On the way back to the car I managed to find a single specimen of the tooth fungus Hydnellum caeruleum, something that Don had long wanted to see so just time for a photo before we said cheerio and parted company.  Once home, the wee bug was very well behaved and allowed my to take some reasonably good photos to aid its identification, and once I visited the British Bugs website I was reasonably happy that I had the right name –
Shore bug Chartoscirta cocksii
Chartoscirta cocksii.  An email with photo to expert Stephen confirmed my identification so I set off back to the forest to release it almost where found.



Sarcodon glaucopus
On the way back from releasing the wee bug I just happened to find a place where a red deer or two had spent the night and there were several piles of reasonably fresh droppings.  Could Garth’s dung beetle be within?  Poking a few droppings it was obvious that something had been living within them but it was also obvious that I could be there for some while checking them one by one with a stick!  So, into a polybag they all went, sealing the bag securely before heading back to the track.  By the track another tooth fungus was spied this time the rarer Sarcodon glaucopus and hiding under the heather were another four fruiting bodies, enough for me to take one to photograph and check the spores.  Back home the deer dung was placed in a deep tray and then water was added so that the tops of all the individual “pellets” were just above the water.  Almost immediately beetles started to appear and within an hour a real mix of species were sitting on top of the balls of dung.  Several of the rounder shaped beetles were collected whilst the rove beetles known as Staphs (Staphylinids) were released, being one of the more difficult group of beetles to ID and with no one readily available to undertake the task.  The tube of beetles was then sent off to Garth who identified Cercyon impressus and a colleague identified two species
Sarcodon glaucopus spores x1000
of Aphodius, A. pedellus and A. fasciatus.  All three species had previously been recorded by John Owen, an amazing coleopterist.  Not knowing what was what before sending the beetles off, links are given below to websites with photos of each species.  The tooth fungus though produced lots of spores and despite having seen hundreds of fruiting bodies of this fungus during the survey years; this was the first time I had taken the opportunity to look at the spores.  Amazingly tiny, measuring only 5-7 microns (0.005 to 0.007mm!) but beautifully ornate with their tiny warts (tubercles) making them look a bit like stars.

Mid-month saw the bulk of the Scottish contingent of the Taylor clan heading south for a weeks holiday in Lancashire, time to catch up with great gran Holden and to let her meet up for the first time with great grandson Harry.  So Janet and I piled in with Ruth and the boys and headed off down the A9 with baby Harry demanding only two stops during the 350 miles.  The same journey in a years time might need
Great gran & the boys
passports and travellers cheques if “our dear leader” has his way!  Janet had found a cosy cottage about ten minutes drive from her mum’s and close enough to the Lancashire members of the Taylor clan for the occasional get together.  Outings with the six year old and four year old boys was good fun but a test of being able to run to keep up with them in races round the local parks and with four month old Harry the old biceps were well exercised in between sleep and feed times.  We visited Ribchester, Longridge and Slaidburn to dine, shop and walk and a final days outing to Townely Hall near Burnley found a brilliant bit of ancient woodland, fountains and a nice cafรฉ.  For the first time in many a year we saw lots of ladybirds, two of which, found more than once, had me guessing a bit with a leaning towards harlequins, where male and female are quite different.  This ladybird is a very recent arrival in Britain the first ones only being found in summer 2004 but since then the spread has been rapid and not good news for our native species.  The harlequin breeds continually during the summer so the population grows very rapidly, our native species reproduce
One version of the harlequin ladybird
only once a year.  The harlequin also has a voracious appetite and can out-compete our native species.  Since its arrival several UK native ladybirds have declined quite notably.  Visit the Ladybird website below to read more about this ladybird and its amazing spread across Europe.  Once home the photos were sent to the UK Ladybird website and all were confirmed as this species, the Longridge record being from a new map square.  The other things of interest related to oak trees.  Whilst racing the boys round a small park in Longridge (well Harry was actually in his pram) I pointed out a leaf to Finlay who told me it was an acorn tree and many of the leaves we looked at were heavily covered with spangle and silk galls.  A search on the ground produced several acorns with the hat shaped knopper gall covering the nut,
Another version of the harlequin
something we also found in quantity at Townely Hall.  The week went by in a bit of a blur and soon it was time to say cheerio to great gran before heading back north, just in time to get the chalet ready for the arrival of Zoe and Darren and their amazing motion activated trail camera which captured visiting pine martens during every night of their stay.

Enough, enjoy the read.
Stewart and Janet

British Bugs website - brilliant
Website with photo of Aphodius pedellus
Website with photo of Aphodius fasciatus
Website with photo of Cercyon impressus
Harlequin ladybird
Buglife Calendar 2014 - £6.50 inc. p&p.

Andricus seminationis gall on local oak tree
Support Buglife see weblink above
Slug (Arion ater) eating waxcap (Hygrocybe conica)
Photos © Stewart Taylor


Wednesday 30 October 2013

Alpine bearberry spectacle up on high

The 1st September was an interesting day.  Car packed early and off we went to Grantown on Spey to erect the tent and install tables and stands for Janet’s tweed crafts as we attended the annual Motormania event.  This event attracts mainly vintage cars from all over the country along with a few “boys with their modern toys” in the form of high performance Fords, Lotuses and even the odd Ferrari: one sitting proudly with its
Janet's tent/stall before the gale
rear bonnet open to show a pretty amazing engine.  With all town centre roads closed several thousand folk wandered up and down the High Street, side streets and car parks to admire the gathering of automobile history.  The day was very dull with rain threatening to fall and the breeze ensured that the tent was well pegged down before leaving Janet to test her selling skills with the visitors.  At about 2.30pm my mobile rang with Janet asking I get back to Grantown asap because a pole had broken and the tent was blowing down. 
Remember the old AA patrol man?
So, armed with brown parcel tape, extra rope, string and tent pegs I headed back to Motormania to see what I could do to help.  Most of the time the wind rattling the tent wasn’t too bad, but every so often a huge gust was funnelled up the High Street and the tent was being severely tested.  The adjacent tent had already collapsed and a few of the charity tents had been taken down ahead of being flattened.  I managed to add supports to the broken pole and went round the tent adding additional guy ropes and pegs in the hope that I had done enough to keep the tent in contact with the ground.  Not quite, and as the gale force gusts continued to batter the tent and, having lost a bit of shelter from the adjacent tent that had already collapsed, the flimsy multitude of uprights and cross-pieces which allow the tent to neatly fold to a central pillar decided they had had enough.  One by one poles and cross-pieces gave way and despite standing as an extra “pole”
A selection of the older cars on display
to support the side taking all the wind, we had to call it a day and as I continued in my “support” role, Janet packed everything away, admitting defeat.  Somehow we got the tent frame almost into its concertina shape though one upright had to be snapped off and many cross-pieces bent back into shape, and with everything back in the car we headed home.  The aluminium tent frame ended up in the local recycling centre and a bit of re-investment will be needed before the next outdoor event, but thankfully all of Janet’s goods survived apart from one set of bunting which I’d used to try and keep everything upright.  Overall though the day was a success with the biggest gathering of cars to date, a huge visitor attendance and Janet managing to sell a few of her amazing bags.

After arriving home I got a very worrying phone call from daughter Ruth.  She had been notified that the company covering Badenoch and Strathspey with houses, Allan Munro Construction, had applied for planning permission for three houses in a piece of woodland known as The Knoll, adjacent to the church hall where she is in charge of the Under 5’s playgroup.  The playgroup works to the principles of a “Forest School” meaning that almost every day the play leaders and Under 5’s leave the church hall to walk and explore the environs of local woods and fields.  The planning application was for houses in woodland the group use for most of their outings, an area of woodland which had already been much reduced by successful planning applications for four huge houses, all way outside the price range of local folk.  If the current application was to be successful there would be a real threat to the viability and continuity of the playgroup, so, having been on a couple of outings with the group and seeing how successfully it operated, I
The Under 5's Flower-top place + one of the new houses
thought I should visit the site to gather information for an objection to the application.  Ever since Ruth became playgroup leader she has been telling me about the loss of this particular woodland as more houses kept appearing and the last thing a playgroup leader needs to be doing is check the local paper every week for planning applications.  On visiting the woodland I was astounded that the houses built or in the process of being built had been allowed by Highland Council and more worryingly, the Cairngorm National Park Authority.  The wood comprises several ancient oaks, some willows and lots of birch, all growing on a knoll, and before the recent intrusion of new houses, was a small patch of woodland, already surrounded by houses.  In all senses of the word this had been “amenity” woodland, an area used by local kids to play and providing access from a group of 30-40 houses from an earlier development to other paths and pavements leading to the River Spey and the local post office.  The Park Authority had recently funded the up-grading of a “core path” running through the woodland but worryingly had allowed it to be diverted to avoid the
The Knoll woodland, as shown on the current Local Plan
LBS128 is the route of the old footpath
massive excavation into The Knoll for another of the Munro houses which, interestingly, had yet to be built.  So, routes of paths were GPS-ed and photos taken of the new houses along with photos of locations within the wood regularly used by the playgroup, Flower-top place, the Tardis and the huge fungus covered birch stump known as the Elephant’s foot.  The latter location had already been lost to the garden area of one of the new properties, the fate that Flower-top place would also suffer when another house nearing completion was fenced off.  How could a small patch of “amenity” woodland have been so badly degraded by housing?  Back home, as I prepared my letter of objection, I was able to find out, and the lack of any of the statutory bodies reacting to what was going on was quite worrying.  Highland Council now has an e-planning website so all recent planning applications for three of the four new houses can be looked at, the fourth amazingly, has been on the go since 2008 so falls outside the time when the e-planning site was set up.  The current application would see three houses built in a very elevated location on the top of The Knoll with a new road to be installed by cutting deeply into the northern edge of the woodland.  This road would have to cut across the new core path funded by the Park and across the path regularly used by the Under 5’s!  Fences delineating each house would run down the slope to meet the fences of the old houses comprising Railway
The same woodland area as last map showing new houses and
loss of woodland prior to current planning application.
Plots 1, 2 & 3 refer to current planning application.
Cottages, cutting off the route completely back to the roadside pavement used by the Under 5’s.  The location map for the current application interestingly, didn’t show any of the recent new houses.  Most worrying was that the planning application hadn’t been called in by the Park’s planners despite the houses removing any notion of “amenity woodland” for local folk.  Checking e-planning for the other new houses revealed that none of these either, had been called in by the Park Authority.  Checking the current Local Plan for Kincraig, an area designated for housing was shown to the north of the village, with no mention made to houses being acceptable in The Knoll woods.  All very odd!  So, my letter of objection was written to Highland Council and copied to the Park Authority, Dave Thompson our local MSP and to Danny Alexander our MP.  Ruth and the playgroup leaders and children were photographed by the local paper standing in the wood holding “Save our Wood” placards, and a meeting was organised by the Kincraig Community Council.  Lots of Kincraig folk objected and before Highland Council had to make a decision Munro Construction withdrew their application.  Hopefully, the now much reduced area of woodland can be legally designated as amenity for locals to enjoy and, just as important, the future of the local playgroup should now be assured despite them having to re-locate Flower-top Place.  The Scores on the Doors – 10/10 for the MSP and MP’s help but 0/10 for the Cairngorm National Park Authority for their complete lack of interest in the site, helping them retain my title of Cairngorm Tourism and Housing Authority. 

September saw the last of the butterfly transect visits, the 26th week of transect walks which started way back in April.  Once the cool, dry spring was passed we had what a lot of folk locally have been calling a “proper” summer.  There have been sunny periods and a spell in July when temperatures reached 30 degrees C, but most of all it has been incredibly dry, and checking with Strathspey Weather it is possible to see that, until 27 October this has been the driest year since 2003 if you compare the annual running total of millimetres of rainfall (Jan added to Feb etc). 

J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
2001
20
66
108
148
164
212
296
391
448
569
622
687
2002
57
148
187
215
264
303
406
456
493
599
682
702
2003
86
107
141
199
266
291
324
354
389
470
496
582
2004
82
130
170
236
262
356
380
491
531
636
683
725
2005
109
196
242
292
364
436
454
516
544
674
779
807
2006
15
45
98
134
188
225
274
325
410
496
549
611
2007
57
91
151
163
252
360
465
536
597
626
732
788
2008
111
163
237
329
354
434
500
588
635
731
784
810
2009
26
98
170
197
247
301
423
500
569
666
777
884
2010
70
143
188
242
289
328
415
513
630
700
818
848
2011
41
96
167
194
265
356
465
607
662
712
748
847
2012
75
99
103
261
313
401
499
556
613
682
719
789
2013
35
67
87
126
192
246
283
329
366
420
-
-

With the summer of reasonable weather you would have thought butterflies would have responded but, overall, 2013 wasn’t a good year despite 23 of the 26 weeks transects being walked.  From the table you can see that of the regulars, green-veined whites showed the biggest increase and it was nice to see that small tortoiseshells also were up in numbers.  After their record breaking year in 2012, scotch argus numbers were more normal but at 11 species this was the lowest number for a few years.  Large heath and red admiral were seen, but not on one of the transects.  Better management of the roadside verges along the moor
Loch Garten butterfly transect data 2013
section could be beneficial as would a reduction in woodland development on the moor itself.  Grazing rather than heather burning would also help, but with no real stock retained by the farmers with common grazing rights, this is probably not an option.  I have asked whether vegetation cutting could be trialled, especially near to the transect.  Perhaps the most amazing sight this year was the 30-odd green-vein whites flying over the first ever corn crop on the farm section of the transect, accompanied by a few small tortoiseshells and the only meadow brown seen this year.  The link below takes you to the Butterfly Conservation website but there is data missing for April 2012, there is no data as yet for 2013.

Way back in January I made a rash decision.  After giving a talk to the Grantown U3A group I was asked about leading a walk to see some of the Abernethy fungi.  I explained that I wasn’t an expert on fungi in general but would be happy to take them to see some of the tooth fungi that I had surveyed and was confident at being able to identify.  And so it was that the date arrange came into view at the start of the month.  As we arrived back from holiday at the end of August the first thing I did was to go and have a look at one of the local tracks where tooth fungi usually
The hoursehair parachute Marasmius androsaceus
growing  from a cone was also found
fruited in good numbers.  However, with the dry summer few had appeared so a bit of frantic searching was undertaken so see if there were at least a few species to make the visit worth their while.  Sadly, with common species like Hydnellum peckii missing it wouldn’t be possible to see regular species side by side to compare and note differences but after looking around enough species were found to make the visit possible.  A single H. peckii was found along with quite a few Bankera fuligineoalba.  An impressive Hydnellum caeruleum was also present as was Hydnellum scrobiculatum a species that is still going through the DNA checking process to arrive at its true identity.  We finished off with a tiny patch of Phellodon melaleucus close to a nest of bumblebees which had been dug out by a badger.  As we were
Sarcodon glaucopus
found after the U3A visit!
making our way back along the track I was drawn into an area of what would normally be a small pool to let the visitors see an unusual sedge for this type of area, Carex aquatilis (Northern Sedge), normally found along the River Spey and the extensive river-side marsh lands.  There was something odd about the sedge and when the visitors had gone I went back to the pool, now dried out due to the prolonged spell without rain.  At one end of the pool this sedge stood very tall, taller than normal, whilst further up the pool the same(?) sedge was growing but at about half the height of the first and I began to think of one of the clumps as being a hybrid.  This would involve samples being sent to an expert but first I thought it best to involve botanist Andy who agreed that one patch looked like true Carex aquatilis and the other the hybrid between C. aquatilis and C. nigra = Carex x hibernica.  All very confusing.  Also, in the same pool another sedge looked a bit odd and I seemed to remember Andy saying that there was already a hybrid sedge growing in this pool.  This sedge looked like Carex vesicaria (bladder sedge), a species that has so far not been found in Abernethy, and sure enough, when I checked the database the sedge turned out to be the hybrid between Carex vesicaria and Carex rostrata (bottle sedge) turning it into Carex x involuta.  The pool is full of bottle sedge but where was the bladder sedge with which it had hybridised?  One for the future.  More intriguing was the hybrid sedge flower head was covered with black
Bladder sedge left & bottle sedge on
the right complete with smut fungus
balls of the Anthracoidea smut fungus mentioned last month, a fungus which is usually faithful to the sedge species it is growing on, so would this one be bottle or bladder sedge?  One for Kew to try and sort.  About half of all the bottle sedge flower heads were also infected with the fungus which will probably turn out to be Anthracoidea subinclusa once the experts have checked it.  From the books the bladder sedge looked to be quite a bonny and distinct sedge so I thought it would be worth having a look for it, though my first encounter was totally by accident.  Re-visiting The Knoll housing site I had a bit of time to spare before going on to see daughter Ruth so I popped into an interesting boggy area surrounded on the drier ground with mature oaks on the edge of the River Spey.  In amongst the vast stands of Northern sedge I could see what looked like a very heavy headed bottle sedge which, on closer inspection, turned out to be bladder sedge.  Also nearby was lots of bottle sedge so it was easy to see the differences between the two species.  Again the bottle sedge had the smut fungus present.  In amongst a group of willow bushes I came across a population of Carex lasiocarpa,
Carex lasiocarpa with
smut fungus
a tall graceful sedge as its name, slender sedge, implies.  Though found through quite a bit of the UK, this sedge is more commonly found “up north”, with good populations in various parts of the Abernethy Reserve.  Was it possible that this sedge could also have been infected by the smut fungus?  I was hoping that no one was watching as I wandered back and forth amongst the sedge that almost
Spores of smut fungus on
Carex lasiocarpa
reached my waist, regularly bending over to check the flower heads.  Bingo, several heads of the sedge were found with the fungus, so a few were carefully collected for checking once home.  Under the microscope the spores looked different to the ones found on the other sedges to date and didn’t look like the A. subinclusa fungus (found on the bottle sedge) as listed currently in the literature as being the species associated with this sedge.  The message from Kew suggests that it probably is different and might, just might, be new to the UK so watch this space.

As a change to searching through sedge beds I thought I would have a day out trying to re-locate a patch of alpine bearberry (Arctostaphylos alpinus) last seen in 1995 by a friend Sandy Payne.  The location was close to the Chalamain Gap, the footpath linking the Cairngorm road to the Lairig Ghru and the location for a sad loss of life during last winters snows.  The start of the path takes you past the reindeer enclosure and as
Northern Corries from Chalamain Gap path
the path rises you get an amazing view of the Northern Corries below the Cairngorm Plateau.  Ahead, the deep cut which is the actual “Gap” beckoned but as I approached its entrance my route took me up onto the lower slopes of Lurcher’s Crag to begin my search.  September is the best time to search for this rare plant locally because at this time of year the leaves turn a vivid red allowing areas of suitable hillside to be scanned with binoculars.  I had a rough, pre-GPS location, but the vegetation in that area just wasn’t suitable (the
Alpine bearberry
plant needs dry, wind-clipped heath, usually with common bearberry) so the normal wandering back and forward searching started.  It took about an hour but eventually a few red erect leaves appeared under-foot and for the first time in a few years details of the site, patch size etc could be forwarded to the records people.  Inspired, I started to wander back and forth whilst slowly heading up hill until eventually it was obvious that I was outside the 700-800 metre asl zone in which the plant is normally found so the search changed to looking for montane lichens.  It was a nice day so the aim changed again and before too long I was, for the first time, on the summit of Lurcher’s Crag with brilliant views all across the Cairngorms and beyond.  On the way up I actually saw some ptarmigan rather than just hear them as on
Looking into the Lairig Ghru from
Lurcher's Crag
earlier outings, and an odd looking growth on a clump of Vaccinium uliginosum (Northern blaeberry) ensured there would be a little homework later in the day.  More about that next month.  I descended so that I was on the Lairig Ghru side of the Chalamain Gap, enabling my first scramble through the “Gap”, hopping carefully from boulder to boulder all the way through.  Quite an amazing place.

The patch of alpine bearberry on the last outing was about 3 x 7 metres in size and though reasonably red, it wasn’t as impressive as it should have been so another outing was planned.  In 2006 I found a couple of patches of the plant on hills to the north of what is known locally as The Burma Road, a track running from Lynwilg near Aviemore over to the River Dulnain, and I had read somewhere that there could be more.  With a good weather forecast I drove up through the High Burnside housing development, trying to find the start of the track I knew would take me up the Milton Burn, through the ancient pines and out to
Red waxcap, possibly Hygrocybe miniata
the open hill, an alternative to the Burma Road.  The track petered out at the deer fence so the rest of the day would involve cross country walking through heather and patches of amazingly coloured deer grass (Tricophorum spp.).  A red waxcap in a bog was worth noting and is probably the same species found in South Uist, and in a few damp areas plants of dwarf cornel were resplendent with red berries and late summer leaves.  It was hot, almost windless and clear as a bell and the hill-top ridge was reached just in time
The unbelievable alpine bearberry
for lunch, though lunch for me means rucksac off and with sandwich in hand, the search for the alpine bearberry started.  The habitat looked right and my GPS told me I was just above the 700 metre contour, and right on cue a tiny patch of red leaves came into view and by the time my mobile lunch was finished, three patches of the bearberry had been found, most with nice red leaves.  A scan with binoculars found another couple of patches but way in the distance several square metres of the hillside was bright red, a truly amazing sight.  Eventually my walking back and forth searching brought me to the big patch and the next twenty minutes were spent taking photos of the flowers (well leaves) from all angles, including some back-lit by the sun.  Without the sun the real beauty of this plant wouldn’t have been seen at its best and as the sun
The Northern Corries & the Cairngorms at the end of
an unforgettable day out
continued to shine more and more patches of the plant were found.  19 patches in all were counted covering about 350 square metres, the biggest 17 x 12 metres,  and I have no doubt there would have been more if I’d had time to search the east side of the summit.  With the clock telling me it was just after 5pm I had to make a phone call home to apologise and to say I was going to be late.  Full sun, no wind, the brilliant alpine bearberry and in the distance the corries of the Cairngorms were just starting to cast shadows, it was hard to make the decision to head for home.  But it was time to say cheerio to the inquisitive mountain hares and time to chase my lengthening shadow down the hill after a brilliant day up on high.

Enjoy the read.
Stewart and Janet

Strathspey Weather
Butterfly Transect data

Baby Harry's first visit to Firwood
Peacock butterfly also at Firwood but not seen on the transect
Ink caps on cow pat!
One of the bigger versions of THE TICK.
13 of these blighters pulled from body after one local outing! 
 Photos © Stewart Taylor