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Ashberry and Rievaulx April 6th 2019

led by Gill Smith

(Species lists below)

Ryenats members

On a lovely sunny day (though with a cold easterly wind) 16 members and friends – including two children which was fantastic – gathered for a meeting that was primarily to see the spring wildflowers. After a brief diversion to see the long-established garden escape Abraham, Isaac and Jacob on the roadside, Gill led the party along the flank of Ashberry Wood from the farmstead, down across the water meadows to Bow Bridge, then returned through waterside meadows to Rievaulx village, returning along the road passing the Abbey on the way.

Trachystemon orientalis
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
Spurge laurel Daphne laureola
Spurge laurel

Ashberry Wood is a surviving patch of ancient woodland on limestone, and has a particularly rich flora. We saw two of the local specialities just inside the gate: green hellebore and spurge laurel – which is in fact a Daphne species, and a little further along the mountain currant. We discussed the differences between the early or wood dog violet and its very similar relative common dog violet and enjoyed the primroses and wood anemones amongst many other flowers. We recorded over 120 species (several of them in leaf only - many thanks to Melanie for id’ing most of these. There are a good number of plants that were not yet showing, for instance baneberry which is known to be in these woods, so this is a conservative estimate of the total number of species present. We saw a group of at least 9 fallow deer in the wood.

Wood anemone Anemone nemorosa
Wood anemones
Wood dog violet Viola reichenbachiana
Wood dog violet
Town Hall Clock or Moschatel Adoxa moschatellina
Town Hall Clock or Moschatel
Common dog violet Viola riviniana
Common dog violet


The meadows along the riverside did not show such a variety of plants but made for a very pleasant walk back towards Rievaulx, and provided some splendid views of the Abbey ruins.

We saw or heard a good number of birds, and were able to watch a nuthatch entering a prospective nest hole – we think this was the female as the other bird, the male, was calling loudly from a nearby tree (below).

male Nuthatch male Nuthatch

There were not many insects about presumably as the air was so cold. We did see peacock and small tortoisesehll butterflies, a 7-spot ladybird, a buff-tailed bumblebee, an Andrena mining bee, a St. Mark’s fly and in interesting beetle – the Red-breasted carrion beetle Oiceoptoma thoracicum (thanks Jordan for the id). According to info on the web it is found on or under the carcasses of birds and small mammals, often in woodland habitats, and curiously enough this species does not eat the material itself, but both adults and larvae hunt for larvae of other insects, such as flies, eating from the remains.


Small tortoiseshell
St. Mark's fly

Small tortoiseshell and St. Mark’s fly

Red-breasted carrion beetle Oiceoptoma thoracicum
Red-breasted carrion beetle Oiceoptoma thoracicum


Rievaulx Abbey

Plants

Latin nameCommon name
Acer campestreField maple
Achillea millefoliumYarrow
Adoxa moschatellinaMoschatel
Aegopodium podagrariaGround elder
Ajuga reptansBugle
Alliaria petiolataHedge garlic or Garlic mustard
Allium ursinumRamsons
Alnus glutinosaAlder
Anemone nemorosaWood anemone
Anthriscus sylvestrisCow parsley
Arabidopsis thalianaThale cress
Arctium minusBurdock
Arum maculatumCuckoo pint
Bellis perennisDaisy
Betula sp.Birch
Brachypodium sylvaticumSlender false brome
Caltha palustrisMarsh marigold
Capsella bursa-pastorisShepherd's purse
Cardamine flexuosaWavy bittercress
Cardamine hirsutaHairy bittercress
Carex flaccaGlaucous sedge
Carex sylvaticaWood sedge
Centaurea nigraCommon knapweed
Cerastium fontanumCommon mouse-ear
Chelidonium majusGreater celandine
Chrysosplenium oppositifoliumOpposite-leaved golden saxifrage
Cirsium arvenseCreeping thistle
Cirsium palustreMarsh thistle
Cirsium vulgareSpear thistle
Conopodium majusPignut
Corylus avellanaHazel
Crataegus monogynaHawthorn
Cruciata laevipesCrosswort
Cymbalaria muralisIvy-leaved toadflax
Dactylis glomerataCocksfoot
Daphne laureolaSpurge laurel
Deschampsia caespitosaTufted hair grass
Dryopteris affinisGolden-scaled male fern
Dryopteris dilatataCommon buckler fern
Dryopteris filix-masMale fern
Filipendula ulmariaMeadowsweet
Fragaria vescaWild strawberry
Fraxinus excelsiorAsh
Galium aparineCleavers
Galium odoratumWoodruff
Geranium dissectumCut-leaved cranesbill
Geranium pratenseMeadow cranesbill
Geranium robertianumHerb Robert
Geum urbanumWood avens
Glechoma hederaceaGround ivy
Glyceria sp.Flote grass
Hedera helixIvy
Helleborus viridisGreen hellebore
Heracleum sphondyliumHogweed
Holcus mollisCreeping soft grass
Hyacinthoides non-scriptaBluebell
Hypericum hirsutumHairy St Johnswort
Ilex aquifoliumHolly
Juncus effususSoft rush
Juncus inflexusHard rush
Lamium albumWhite dead nettle
Lamium purpureumRed dead nettle
Lapsana communisNipplewort
Lathrea squamariaToothwort
Lathyrus pratensisMeadow vetchling
Lolium perennePerennial rye grass
Lonicera periclymenumHoneysuckle
Luzula campestrisField woodrush
Luzula sylvaticaGreater woodrush
Lysimachia nemorumYellow pimpernel
Mercurialis perennisDog's mercury
Mycelis muralisWall lettuce
Myosotis arvensisField forgetmenot
Myosotis sylvaticaWood forgetmenot
Myrrhis odorataSweet cicely
Oxalis acetosellaWood sorrel
Petasites hybridusButterbur
Pilosella officinarumMouse-ear hawkweed
Plantago lanceolataRibwort plantain
Plantago majorRatstail plantain
Poa annuaAnnual meadow grass
Polystichum aculeatumHard shield fern
Potentilla reptansCreeping cinquefoil
Potentilla sterilisBarren strawberry
Primula vulgarisPrimrose
Prunella vulgarisSelf heal
Prunus aviumWild cherry
Prunus spinosaBlackthorn
Pteridium aquilinumBracken
Quercus sp.Oak
Ranunculus acrisMeadow buttercup
Ranunculus ficaria = Ficaria verna ssp fertilisLesser celandine
Ranunculus repensCreeping buttercup
Ribes alpinumMountain currant
Ribes uva-crispaGooseberry
Rorippa microphylla = Nasturtium microphyllumNarrow-fruited watercress
Rosa sp.Rose
Rubus fruticosusBramble
Rumex obtusifoliusBroad-leaved dock
Salix capreaGoat willow
Sambucus nigraElder
Scrophularia auriculataWater figwort
Scrophularia nodosaCommon figwort
Senecio vulgarisCommon groundsel
Silene dioicaRed campion
Sonchus oleraceusSmooth sowthistle
Stachys sylvaticaHedge woundwort
Stellaria holosteaGreater stitchwort
Stellaria mediaChickweed
Taraxacum sp.Dandelion
Teucrium scorodoniaWood sage
Trachystemon orientalisAbraham Isaac and Jacob
Trifolium repensWhite clover
Urtica dioicaNettle
Veronica agrestisGreen field speedwell
Veronica beccabungaBrooklime
Veronica chamaedrysGermander speedwell
Veronica filiformisSlender speedwell
Veronica hederifoliaIvy-leaved speedwell
Veronica persicaCommon field speedwell
Vicia sepiumBush vetch
Viola odorataSweet violet
Viola reichenbachianaEarly dog violet
Viola rivinianaDog violet

Birds

Great Tit
Blue Tit
Long-tailed Tit
Marsh Tit
Coal Tit
Nuthatch
Greenfinch
Goldfinch
Siskin
Blackbird
Wren
Grey Wagtail
Chiffchaff
Wood Pigeon
Jackdaw
Buzzard
Rook

Mammal

Fallow deer

Insects

Bee Fly
Small Tortoiseshell
Mining bee Andrena sp.
Honeybee
Bumblebee Bombus sp.
Peacock butterfly
Shield Bug
Red-breasted carrion beetle
7-spot ladybird
Thanks to Keith and Tom for the bird and insect lists



© Ryedale Natural History Society 2019, Photos © Keith Gittens, Nick Fraser, Jordan Protano-Byrne 2019 Back to the Home page