21.10.2015 Views

SUSTAINABILITY

15-07-275_Sanctuary_Magazine__FINAL_lowres_

15-07-275_Sanctuary_Magazine__FINAL_lowres_

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

AROUND THE REGIONS<br />

16<br />

Northamptonshire<br />

Yardley Chase Training Area<br />

Purple Emperor (male) © J A Richardson<br />

The Yardley Chase site of some 200<br />

hectares was purchased in 1940 so<br />

that rail connected storage bunkers<br />

could be built. The site was mainly<br />

woodland, surrounded by meadow<br />

and parkland. For t y-four bunkers<br />

were built with blast walls excavated<br />

from the surrounding clay soil, but it<br />

was not long before these borrow<br />

pits filled with water creating a ring of<br />

ponds around each walled bunker,<br />

124 in total. This unique site is now<br />

suppor ting a diverse flora and fauna,<br />

all three species of newt, frogs and<br />

toads, slow worms and grass snakes<br />

and 22 dragonflies; there is a<br />

creditable list of flora including<br />

vascular plants, mosses, liver wor ts,<br />

algae (including stonewor ts) and<br />

lichens. The whole site was declared<br />

an SSSI in 1981. Many of the ponds<br />

are now becoming overshadowed by<br />

tree and shrub grow th: there is some<br />

clearance in progress but effor ts are<br />

also needed to return the<br />

surrounding meadowland to its<br />

original richness by managing<br />

mowing and grazing.<br />

Focus on lepidoptera in 2014<br />

But ter f lies are in good numbers and<br />

include the black hairstreak and<br />

wood white; the black hairstreak has<br />

not been recorded over the last<br />

three years but could still be on site.<br />

O ver the past three years our<br />

but ter f ly numbers have increased to<br />

include the purple emperor, dark<br />

green and silver-washed fritillar y,<br />

none of these three have been<br />

recorded since the late seventies.<br />

Our total number of lepidoptera<br />

sp ecies has now reached 470.<br />

Focus on desmids in 2014<br />

The desmids have been studied since<br />

Victorian times (John Ralfs) and the<br />

literature is more extensive than with<br />

many freshwater algal groups. There<br />

are more than 900 known species in<br />

the British Isles: so they are<br />

comparable in biodiversity with<br />

bryophytes or birds. These are highly<br />

evolved single celled members of the<br />

Chlorophyta or green algae, they are<br />

among the most beautiful objects<br />

that can be seen under the<br />

microscope and are indicators of<br />

wetland quality. Desmids are more<br />

often found in areas with unpolluted<br />

acid water and have thus been much<br />

less studied in southern lowland areas<br />

of the UK. A study of desmids in the<br />

Yardley Chase ponds is thus of<br />

scientific value and the diversity found<br />

already is greater than originally<br />

expected and it is of interest to<br />

speculate why this should be: perhaps<br />

because of the raised boulder clay<br />

deposits within ancient woodland?<br />

Within the bunker ponds 16 species<br />

from the genus Closterium have been<br />

listed, 9 from Cosmarium, 2 from<br />

Staurastrum and there are<br />

representatives of the genera<br />

Pleurotaenium, Hyalotheca,<br />

Gonatoz ygon, Mesotaenium and<br />

Cylindrocystis. There have been a few<br />

surprises: David Williamson, the UK<br />

expert on this group noticed an<br />

unfamiliar Closterium in 2009 and<br />

established that it was Closterium<br />

regulare, which had not been recorded<br />

for certain in the UK. The bunker<br />

ponds on Yardley Chase remain the<br />

only known location for this species.<br />

C F Carter<br />

Team Member for Algae<br />

J A Richardson<br />

Compton Estate Conservation Advisor<br />

Cosmarium reniforme (Ralfs W. Archer), showing<br />

face view and side view (the cell is about 0.05mm<br />

wide) © C F Carter<br />

Sanctuary 44 • 2015 89

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!