Wednesday 18 November 2020

Long-tailed duck

 



The long-tailed duck (Clangula hyemalis) is a distinctive but rarely seen duck because it usually keeps well out to sea. It winters in waters around the northern coasts of Britain from October to May, when it leaves for its breeding grounds in northern Scandinavia. However, it has also been known to breed in Scotland.

The plumage of the long-tail duck is brown and white. The male moults gradually throughout the year and by midsummer its head and neck are dark but the face remains white. The female has dark cheek patches. Only males have the distinctive long, upright tail. Males grow to 21 inches (53 cm) in length and females to 16 inches (40 cm).

Both sexes are recognised in flight by the absence of bars on their wings and by their unusual flying action, with shallow wing upstrokes but deep downstrokes.

The voice of the male long-tailed duck is extraordinary among ducks for its melodious, resonant and far-carrying quality. The variety of its calls is also remarkable – the calls of a displaying flock have been likened by some ornithologists to the sound of distant bagpipes.

The nest, a mere scrape in the ground sparsely lined with plant material and down, is usually sited in thick vegetation not far from water; occasionally it is in a rock crevice. Sometimes several broods may join together in a crèche.

Six to nine olive-buff eggs are incubated for about 3 ½ weeks. The young become independent after about five weeks.

Long-tailed ducks feed mostly on molluscs and crustaceans, which are gathered by diving. However, vegetable matter such as seeds and leaves is also eaten.

© John Welford

Starry saxifrage

 


Starry saxifrage (Saxifraga stellaris) is a common plant found on wet, stony ground in the mountainous areas of the British Isles. Its tough, penetrating roots exploit the natural cracks and crevices in the rock and anchor it so firmly that it has gained a reputation, like other saxifrages, of being able to carve out its own foothold by actually cracking the stone. This belief, still widespread though erroneous, is reflected in the origin of the plant’s scientific name Saxifraga, which combines the Latin words saxum, meaning ‘rock’ and frango, meaning ‘break’.

The plant grows up to 10 inches (25 cm) in height. It has a rosette of toothed leaves at the base, but the upper parts of the stem are leafless. The low-growing leaves are less exposed to mountain winds, and their closeness to each other help to conserve moisture. The leaves are short-stalked, toothed and hairy on the top surface.

Flowers appear between June and August. They are white with conspicuous red anthers. There are two yellow spots at the base of each petal. The sepals are bent back. The seed capsule splits to the middle or below when ripe.

Ancient medical lore often believed that a plant with particular characteristics that related to an element of human anatomy had been prescribed by God as a cure for ailments relating to that element. Thus a decoction of "stone breaking" starry saxifrage was applied to curing kidney and gall stones in the human body. A 17th-century medical textbook also recommended that saxifrage roots, mixed with wine and vinegar, would cure the plague.

© John Welford

Wednesday 11 November 2020

Goldeneye

 


The goldeneye (Bucephala clangula) is normally a winter visitor to the British Isles that breeds in northern Scandinavia and northern Asia. However, it has been known to breed in a small area of northern Scotland.

It is a small duck measuring up to 18 inches (45 cm) in length. The adult male has black and white plumage, its black head showing a green sheen. It has a white spot on each cheek. The female has brown and white plumage. Both sexes have rectangular white wing patches, high foreheads, short bills, and the bright yellow eyes from which they take their name.

Goldeneye in flight have the fast wing beats typical of diving ducks, but they take off more easily than most and the wings produce a pronounced whistling sound which is quite unmistakable.

Wintering goldeneye take to coastal waters, forming large flocks that are mainly of one sex. They rarely come ashore. However, small flocks are sometimes found on larger stretches of inland water.

Bill-raising and water-splashing have been noted as courtship gestures. Goldeneye prefer to nest in tree holes near a lake or river, but will also use rabbit burrows or specially provided nest boxes. It has been known for goldeneye to take over the old nest holes of woodpeckers.

The bottom of the nesting cavity is unlined, but may be insulated with greyish-white down and a few feathers. A typical clutch consists of 6 to 12 smooth, greenish-blue eggs. When they hatch, the young scramble out of the hole and fall to the ground, which can be a considerable distance. They take about eight weeks to fully develop their flight feathers.

© John Welford

Navelwort

 


Navelwort (Umbilicus rupestris), otherwise known as wall pennywort, is often found growing on high roadside banks in western England, Wales, and western Scotland. It is much less common further east. It grows between stones in the banks and also in rock crevices and on sea cliffs.

The size of the plant varies greatly according to its position. Lush, branched specimens spring from moist and shady surroundings, whereas much smaller plants cling to dry walls or exposed cliffs. The plant can therefore vary from 4 to 16 inches (10-40 cm) in height.

Disc-shaped leaves, depressed at the centre, grow on long stalks. Numerous greenish-white bell -shaped flowers appear on tall, narrow spikes between June and August.

The plant ‘s common and scientific names all refer to the unusual shape of the leaves – pennywort from their supposed resemblance to an old penny coin, and navelwort to the central, navel-like dimple. The word umbilicus is Latin for navel, and rupestris means ‘a plant that grows on rocks’.

© John Welford

Thursday 5 November 2020

Shoveler

 


The shoveler (Anas cylpeata) is a handsome but uncommon bird, present all year round in most of England and southern Scotland and joined by winter migrants in south-west England, Wales and the Grampian area of Scotland.

The shoveler’s patchy distribution is governed partly by the availability of its habitat, namely marshy areas with pools, ditches and other areas of open water that have muddy shallows rich in food.

The shoveler grows up to 20 inches (50 cm) in length. The adult male has a glossy green head, like that of the mallard, but with a white breast and chestnut belly. The adult female has a brown head and body with speckled underparts. The wings of both sexes display a blue shoulder, white bar and green rear patch.

However, the most distinctive feature of the shoveler is the long, rounded, spade-like bill that gives the bird its name. The bill is used in the typical manner of dabbling ducks, sifting large volumes of water to filter out particles of food. This includes buds and seeds of water plants such as reeds and sedges, as well as algae and small molluscs. They will also eat crustaceans, insects, tadpoles and frogspawn. The inside edges of the bill have many comb-like teeth to trap food as water is forced through them.

The nest is a feather or grass-lined hollow in the ground, often in relatively open country but usually close to water. Between seven and 14 pale greenish eggs are laid in a clutch from April onwards. Incubation, performed by the female, takes between three and four weeks. The ducklings are led away from the nest as soon as all of them have hatched and are dry. They soon show signs of developing outsize bills. They can fly when about six or seven weeks old. Only one brood is reared each year.

© John Welford

Reflexed stonecrop

 


Reflexed stonecrop (Sedum reflexum) is a plant that was introduced from Europe into Great Britain. Originally grown as a cultivated plant, it spread beyond gardens into the land beyond and now grows in the wild on old walls, rocks and other suitable habitats, especially in southern Britain.

A crop is a dense head of flowers, and the name stonecrop comes from the plant’s habit of growing on stone walls. Reflexed stonecrop is so called because the lower leaves of the flowering stems are sometimes curved back, or reflexed.

Creeping, mat-forming stems produce short, spreading, non-flowering shoots and long, erect, flowering shoots. The leaves are fleshy. The plant grows to 6-12 inches (15-30 cm) in height.

Bright yellow flowers grow in a single cluster at the top of the stem, between June and August.

At one time, the leaves of reflexed stonecrop were eaten as a spring salad, and the 17th-century diarist John Evelyn recommended it as a plant for the kitchen garden. In the Middle Ages it was used to stop bleeding and to cure ulcers and sores.

© John Welford