In London for a few days a bumped into Mediterranean (Roman) Nettle Urtica membranacea in Walthamstow. Not a species Iβve seen before but unmistakable with those long linear inflorescences! #urbanbotany
@bsbiscience
Plant ecologist based in North Yorkshire. Formerly at UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology @ukceh.bsky.social and now Head of Science at the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland @bsbibotany.bsky.social. Coauthor of http://plantatlas2020.org
In London for a few days a bumped into Mediterranean (Roman) Nettle Urtica membranacea in Walthamstow. Not a species Iβve seen before but unmistakable with those long linear inflorescences! #urbanbotany
I noticed that too. Mackenzie Crook is a birder / really good bird artist with a nice picture in the BTOs Red 65? I wondered about contacting him about doing a follow on based on a botanical club (rather than Detectorists). I wonder which society he might choose? Material would be similar!
Snowdrops and crocuses appear through light snow on rocky ground
βSnow has fallen again, as it will sometimes do in Februaryβ
What to Look for in Winter, 1959
Artist: CF Tunnicliffe
Writer: EL Grant Watson
To me a more important point about reintroductions is that they shouldnβt divert our ambition/attention from conserving what weβve already got. That is more mundane day-to-day work/less attention grabbing but absolutely vital not least so introductions have healthy ecosystems in which to thrive.
One of best sites I know is a drumlin that was unsuccessfully βgrippedβ for drainage. SWO regenerated in huge numbers on the overturned mineral soils. Similar habitat on Straloch Moraines in Scotland (but more natural disturbance there)
I think maybe a bit more complicated than just grazing. To me this seems more an early successional species adapted to raw mineral soils in the Arctic (moraines, eskers, exposed riverbanks, etc. mires/flushed grassland is the nearest we have these close quickly in absence of disturbance (grazing!)
It is an increasing garden escape in northern England and spreading by bulbils along rivers where it can form very dense stands on sandy riverbanks disturbed during winter floods. Along the Oak Beck where this study took place there are 10s of 1000s of plants and it seems to be increasing each year
Been listening to Cinder Well all day. The same happened to me with Johnny Flynn and The Detectoristsβ¦
Aconite-leaved Buttercup Ranunculus aconitifolius along the Oak Beck
Purple Toothwort Lathraea clandestina
American Skunk-cabbage Lysichiton americanus by the Oak Beck
Coralroot Cardamine bulbifera by the Oak Beck
The escape of ornamental plants from large gardens can pose a threat to native species and habitats. Here we provide evidence for this in riparian habitats near to Harrogate UK and discuss the lessons for managing potentially invasive species in gardens.
britishandirishbotany.org/index.php/bi...
Our Biological Flora on Wood Crane's-bill is out in @journalofecology.bsky.social. besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/... A team effort w/ @ruthsk.bsky.social @sandravarga.bsky.social @spp-rich.bsky.social @duncanwestbury.bsky.social, irina Tatarenko & artist Lucy Hulmes on pen and ink.
Bishopthorpe Parish Council want to sell a small wildlife oasis hosting rare wildflowers like Yellow Star-of-Bethlehem to a developer. This field belongs to the people of Bish who cherish its wildlife. Please sign this petition to stop them doing this. Thanks π c.org/syGKBRcGBY
Painted in 1913, Paul Nash gave this picture the ultimate simplicity of a title, 'A Drawing.' The elm trees marked the boundary of his family's home at Wood Lane House, Iver Heath in Buckinghamshire. Trees always held a spiritual quality for him.
I love that such a rare bird was secondary to the plant!
Male Holly has been flowering here in Northern England for a few weeks; lots of trees have buds that have yet to open. Apparently not uncommon to have a second flowering late in the year but the first time Iβve noticed it
Surely βnormal for Norfolkβ? π€£ Thatβs a term I use a lot in our household!
We're hiring!
Could you help us support & grow the community of botanists across Northern Ireland?
Manage our @daera-ni.gov.uk-funded Botanical Skills Training Project?
Help boost participation in @npms.bsky.social across NI?
Please apply by midnight this Sunday, 21 Sept:
bsbi.org/botanical-sk...
Glad you made it to Imber! Stunning location and amazing grassland for miles around on each side
Garden Parsley Petroselinum crispum gone to seed?
How Walesβs National Botanic Garden came back from the brink www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2025...
"Upcoming priorities include an ambitious project aimed at reversing Welsh-native flora decline, safeguarding Walesβs 58 endemic species from habitat loss, and creating a living native plant collection."
Book cover: sea beans and Nickar nuts by E. Charles Nelson, BSBI handbook no. 10 images is an arrangement of sea beans
Nature book challenge. A book per in no particular order, until you've s ALL of the best nature books in you personal library. No explanations, no reviews,
#Books #Nature #Naturewriting #naturebooks #conservation #naturebookchallenge #booksky
A trip to Ben Lawers b needed then!
We saw lots of Carex aquatilis when we went βoff pisteβ to get to serpentine outcrops and didnβt Matt Harding find lots of Carex rariflora on slopes just beyond outcrops last year? You can see I like sedges canβt you! Also Cerastium fontanum subsp. scoticum
You could always try for the Hobcarton Crag population. Less of a walk/climb than Meikle Kilrannoch
Which year for Desert Sessions? My fave is the one with PJ Harvey way back when
Sunday book review: Urban Plants by @trevorthebotanist.bsky.social
Publisher: @bloomsburybooksuk.bsky.social
Review: bit.ly/402ICiU
'A great pleasure to browse, an even greater one to read'
'Book of Year contender'
@bsbibotany.bsky.social @bsbiscience.bsky.social @plantlifeuk.bsky.social
Out with lovely peeps from Harrogate District Naturalistsβ Society yesterday visiting a private SSSI near to Knaresborough. Bee and Fragrant Orchids (Ophrys apifera & Gymnadenia conopsea s.s.) were definitely the main crowd pleasers!
I donβt usually βdoβ Hawkweeds but couldnβt resist this lovely one growing near to Pannal en route to my @btobirds.bsky.social BBS square this morning: Hieracium triviale f. subfasciculare apparently. The ability of these plants to thrive in zero substrate is remarkable! @bsbibotany.bsky.social
Jacobβs Ladder, Lathkill Dale
Shaggy Mouse-ear Hawkweed, Monks Dale
Nottingham Catchfly, Monks Dale
Hoary Mullein, Lathkill Dale
Time spent with some rather lovely plants and people from @bsbibotany.bsky.social in the Derbyshire Dales this week including Jacobβs-ladder (Polemonium caeruleum), Shaggy Mouse-ear Hawkweed (Pilosella peleteriana), Nottingham Catchfly (Silene nutans) and Hoary Mullein (Verbascum pulverulentum).
A lovely Chimney Sweeper moth - it feeds on pignut
8/6/25 Yorkshire - A hop over the border to God's own country proved rather fruitful, with many fine #orchids to be seen. This reintroduced Lady's Slipper #Orchid (Cypripedium calceolus) on a woodland margin above a stream is particularly magnificent this year #wildflowerhour @bsbibotany.bsky.social