Not entirely sure how Poa was autocorrected to Apiaceae!
@bramblebotanist
Botany Senior Specialist at Natural England, #BSBI Limonium/Rubus/Galium/Hypericum/Thymus referee & meetings secretary. Elm/stonewort/dandelion/snowdrop enthusiast, Plant & butterfly reintros, botany tours, Punk, #Norfolk #Iamabotanist Views own πͺπΊ
Not entirely sure how Poa was autocorrected to Apiaceae!
Galanthus βGreen Zebraβ, a lovely and late flowering virescent nivalis, with strong green stripes
Sweet Violet family portrait: Viola odorata v odorata (purple), v dumetorum (white with purple spur) and their cross v lilacina #wildflowerhour
Early Meadow-grass Poa infirma being its most obvious at this time of year, forming lime green patches on the edges of tracks, pull-ins by roads, carparks.. then check for a narrow inflorescence, non-branching culms, no purple in flowers and ovoid anthers - to separate from annua #wildflowerhour
Several fun finds with #NorfolkFloraGroup yesterday. The βreddish formβ of Sweet Violet Viola odorata, a βspikeyβ Snowdrop Galanthus nivalis, Yellow Vetchling Lathyrus aphaca and Early Meadow-grass Apiaceae infirma #Wildflowerhour
Heβs awesome! How might one find a Sea-lavender Weevil? Are they about all year? Presumably on Limonium, only?
Very interesting! Thank you @beccyscottuk.bsky.social
theconversation.com/the-black-de...
Itβs #WorldBookDay so botany friends, what is your favourite book? For me itβs Sell & Murrellβs epic Flora of GB&I. I came to it late, with the publication of the final vol (vol 1) in 2018. I was already into Rubus but elucidated critical botany for me & enabled recording fine scale diversity.
A magnificent Long-tailed Elm Ulmus longicaudata in my village, the only one Iβve ever seen as a mature tree. Now flowering, like most elms. #Wildflowerhour
Blackthorn! No itβs Cherry Plum! No itβs Blackthorn! Sort it out. Cherry Plum has green twigs, no thorns, reflexed sepals and flowers now. And is pretty gorgeous. Blackthorn equally so but in a few weeks #Wildflowerhour
Well, I should say Polyanthus (as in garden bedding).. which might not be x polyantha (as in cowslip x primrose)
Agree these are x polyantha. A giveaway on elatior hybrids of all sorts is the green bands on the calyx
Not ringing any bells unfortunately @anaturalistabroad.bsky.social will know!
I thought so! Itβs now with a professional horticulturist who is much more likely to succeed propagating it than me. Excited to see how it grows as a garden plant.
An awesome tricolor sport of Holly Ilex aquifolium spotted in rural mid-Norfolk today. A single variegated branch on an otherwise standard hedgerow tree. Collected for propagation as it should make an interesting garden plant.
Helleborus viridis Green Hellebore in a mid-Norfolk fragment of ancient Hornbeam-Hazel woodland. Not seen here for 25 years nor anywhere in Norfolk for a decade - relieved it is still here! #Wildflowerhour
Thatβs a long way of saying yeah Andyβs plant looks good for fortunei
Possible macrophyllum on the entrance path to an underground Anderson shelter in Wymondham
1 Glossy mid-green with many pinnae - falcatum
1 dull yellow-green 2
2 pinnae +/- symmetric, broad, induisia erose- macrophyllum
2 pinnae narrow, asymmetric induisia entire 3
3 lax upright habit, lanceolate pinnae - fortunei
3 compact arching habit, short pinnae - clivicola
As far I can work out the options we have for Cytomium established in GB are fortunei, clivicola, macrophyllum and falcatum. Best assessed when well grown (which they often arenβt):
Oh donβt ask me.. we got thoroughly confused by them a few weeks back. It doesnβt help that there are so many misidentified images knocking about, new taxa and Staceβs characters donβt match those from the experts. Hopefully Fred will write something to clarify them all
Houseleek Sempervivum tectorum on a craggy carstone wall in west Norfolk seen with #NorfolkFloraGroup this weekend. A few #Necrobotany flowers remaining for #Wildflowerhour
Just three, one of which was already going over.
Gagea bohemica Early Star-of-Bethlehem at Stanner Rocks! A cheery spark of sunshine in the damp grey welshness. All credit to the volunteer site warden who keeps the habitat open for this and the siteβs other botanical treasures. #Wildflowerhour
Veronica persica var persica, the scarcer and earlier flowering version of Common Field Speedwell, with a solid blue rather than pale/white lower petal in the common var corrensiana. Seen on open verges etc with #NorfolkFloraGroup #Wildflowerhour
Could you become BSBI's new Wales Officer, helping support the network of botanists across Wales & leading our Priority Plants in Wales Project?
You'd be helping to conserve rare & beautiful wild plants, like this lovely Radnor Lily.
For more details & how to apply, visit:
bsbi.org/about/people...
PhD opportunity: I am looking for someone with a passion for the natural environment and an interest in developing applied research collaboratively with the RSPB
Please spread the word!
@bes-rewildinggroup.bsky.social
@bes-conservation.bsky.social
@rewildingbritain.org.uk
@rspb.bsky.social
Top to bottom elwesii elwesii x plicatus = hybridus syn grandiflorus plicatus plicatus x nivalis = valentinei nivalis x elwesii nivalis
Top to bottom elwesii elwesii x plicatus = hybridus syn grandiflorus plicatus plicatus x nivalis = valentinei (slight recurved margins) nivalis nivalis x elwesii
A comparison of snowdrop leaves. Galanthus elwesii, nivalis, plicatus and their three hybrids. Names on ALT
Galanthus x hybridus (syn grandiflorus).. it is like elwesii but with grooved leaves from the plicatus parent, and often large flowers.
Yes Galanthus elwesii. Monstrous forms occur but more often they are recently disturbed plants / recently planted and take a while to settle down