Sunday, 14 February 2016

Meeting 12th February 2016

This month's meeting of the Louth Area Group of Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust featured a talk by Audrey and John Spring on "Gardening for Butterflies".

Audrey and John manage the Butterfly Garden at Chambers Farm Wood.  They described the various butterfly species that might be expected in a well planted garden through the year and also those species found at Chambers Farm Wood Nature Reserve.  There are about 60 butterfly species found in the British Isles (and over 2500 macro-moths) with 35 species regularly recorded in Lincolnshire, of which about 20 butterfly species found in gardens.

We heard how our adult over-wintering species, Brimstone, Gonepteryx rhamni, Peacock, Aglais io, and Small Tortoiseshell, Aglais urticae, have already been seen this January and February.  The Comma, Polygonia c-album, should soon follow. They feed on the winter-flowering heathers and the early flowers such as Primrose, Wallflower and Pulminaria.

Aubrey and John explained how to maximise one's garden species count by growing a succession of suitable flowers through the year, with spring flowers such as Forget-me-not, Grape-hyacinth and Aubretia.  Dandelions are a common but very valuable food source in April and the somewhat similar looking Leopards Bane, Doronicum, is another useful early flower.

The Orange Tip, Anthocharis cardamines, is a fairly early species, the first that has not over-wintered as an adult, appearing in April and May.  It lays it's eggs on Honesty, Sweet-rocket and Cuckooflower, Cardamine pratensis, from which the species name is derived.  The Holly Blue, Celastrina ariolus, is another early species with adults from onver-wintering pupae emerging in April.  It feeds on the Forget-me-not and then the Red Valerian and lays it eggs on holly and, later, on ivy.

Our peak butterfly time is late July and early August when the Big Butterfly Count takes place. Our gardens are likely to host the Large White, Piers brassicae and Small White, Pieris repae, and, if one is lucky, the Green Veined White, Pieris napi.  Speckled Woods, Pararge aegeria are increasing in numbers, no longer confined to woodland while the Wall Brown, Lasiommata megera, is becoming scarcer. Meadow Brown, Maniola jurtina, Gatekeeper, Pyronia tithonus, easily identified by its double eye-spot and Wall are more likely to be seen in the countryside but may visit gardens, as does the Ringlet, Aphantopus hyperantus, characterised by its up-and-down flight-path.

The migrant species, Red Admiral, Vanessa atlanta, and Painted Lady, Vanessa cardui, are garden visitors in high summer while species more likely to be found at sites such as Chamber Wood include the Clouded Yellow, Colias croceus, Camberwell Beauty, Nymphallis antiopaa,  Small, Thymelicus sylvestris and Large Skipper, Ochlodes sylvanus.  The Brown Hairstreak, Thecla betulae, is  a particular rarity.  A count at Chambers Farm Wood found 20 adults but 3500 eggs were recorded in a survey.

As well as managing the Butterfly Garden at Chambers Farm Wood, Butterfly Conservation also manage reserves at 


The Lincolnshire Branch of Butterfly Conservation are holding their Spring Indoor Meeting at Chambers Farm Wood Education Centre on 2nd April 2016.
Ken Wade LRPS, CPBGB whose talk is entitled "Hints & Tips for Better Nature Photographs", and Sharon Hearle, the Project Officer for East Anglia, who will be talking about her work.

The Brown Hairsteak, Thecla betulae.




Thursday, 28 January 2016

GIBRALTAR POINT 27 JANUARY 2016

VISIT TO LWT GIBRALTAR POINT 27 JANUARY 2016
BY MEMBERS OF LAG AND LOUTH U3A
In previous Januarys we have not been able to reach Gibraltar Point because the road was iced over or blocked by snow. This year the temperature was 14̊ C albeit with a 28 mph wind. So it was a matter of a struggle against the wind to reach the hides. Thankfully we only needed a couple of layers of gear instead of the four that we normally wear in the winter.
The fifteen of us met LWT Warden Kevin Wilson who gave an update on the near completion state of the new Visitors’ Centre. We also heard about the dilemma of marsh management that had arisen since the 2014 floods. Because of grants from various sources work was able to take place to ensure the safety and accessibility of the site. But what about the fresh water meadows that had been inundated with salt water and with seeds of salt marsh plants which had germinated and had taken a hold? Maybe the plants had the answer as Marsh orchids and other fresh water plants were beginning to emerge again amongst the Sea couch grass and the Sea-club rush.
We moved with the wind behind us to visit all the hides. It was a duck and goose day with very few waders. However, it was not until we made our species count over lunch at Poppy’s that we realised that between us we had seen 40 species of birds, even if some of them were lone individuals. We were pleased to see a few Roe deer amongst a group of Pink-footed geese whilst the co-location of Shoveller ducks and Shelduck enabled us to ‘spot the difference’!


 BIRD LIST:
Little Grebe, Cormorant, Little Egret, Mute Swan, Pink-Footed Goose, Greylag Geese, Canada Goose, Brent Goose, Shelduck, Wigeon, Gadwall, Teal, Mallard, Shoveller, Pochard, Kestrel, Coot, Lapwing, Black-Tailed Godwit, Kestrel, Coot, Lapwing, Black-tailed godwit, Curlew, Redshank, Black-Headed Gull, Wood Pigeon, Dunnock, Robin, Blackbird, Redwing, Blue Tit, Great Tit, Magpie, Jackdaw, Carrion Crow, Starling, Sparrow, Chaffinch, Greenfinch, Goldfinch (40)
MAMMALS: 5 Roe deer
Ray W

Saturday, 9 January 2016

January Meeting

The first meeting of the Louth Area Group of Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust for 2016 took place at the Conoco Room on Friday the 8th of January, with more than 50 people turning out to hear Roy Harris give us an illustrated talk about wildlife in the Orkneys



Focussing on his long experience of conservation work there, Roy, described a management system for stock grazing that allowed an exceptional abundance of wildflowers to develop.

The Loft and Hill of White Hamars Grazing Project is described in more detail
here and here.

Roy and his colleagues have demonstrated that if the grassland is kept stock-free in the spring and early summer but grazed in the autumn and winter, an exceptional abundance and diversity of wildflowers quickly develops. Without this deliberate grazing management, such biodiversity is only found of the steep cliff edges, inaccessible to cattle and too windy for scrub growth.

With the help of EU funding that promotes wildlife conservation, farmers were successfully encouraged to adjust their grazing and hay-making regimes so that significant areas were transformed into flower rich grassland, maritime heathland and wetlands. 


Photo: Plantlife

One of the particular rarities that Roy told us about is the Scottish Primrose, Primula scotica. Endemic to Caithness and the Orkneys, this little flower has increased in abundance from a few hundred to several thousand over a ten year period of restricting the early grazing.

Roy left us with the clear message that if farming were to work constructively with conservation objectives, a landscape of diversity and abundance could once again become commonplace rather than a rarity.


Saturday, 2 January 2016

The New Year for the Louth Area Group

Good soggy morning and a happy new year,
LAG JANUARY MEETING
The next meeting of the Louth Area Group will be at 7.30 pm in the ConocoPhillips Room, Louth library when Roy Harris will bring some colour to the dreary winter evening as he talks about, ‘The Flowers of the Orkneys’. The entrance fee is £2.50 which includes refreshments. Children are welcome and have free admittance.

INFORMATION AND ACTION
I am pleased to report that Rick Hill had a few people helping him to clear the pond at Muckton Wood in November. The next session for a couple of hours will be at 9.30 am this Sunday 10 January. Just turn up in working kit.

Do try to take part in the RSPB Great Garden Bird Watch at the end of the month on 30 and 31 January. It is a national survey and you don’t have to be an RSPB member to take part. All the details will be in the national press and on the RSPB website.
It will be much appreciated if you can send me a list of the birds that you saw as soon as possible after the survey together with the name of the town/village/site where you saw them. I can collate the details and publish them in the LAG Spring Newsletter.

In our own area the mild wet weather has caused Spring to advance. We have primroses and violets out in the garden as well as hectic bird activity. What evidence of an early Spring have you noticed?

WARNING NOTICE
The LAG Annual General Meeting will be held on Friday 8 April when I give a report of our past and future activities and we elect the committee members for the next 12 months. Please consider joining the committee we need a least a couple more members. At the AGM members have the opportunity to show a dozen digital pictures for the delectation of those present. The meeting is rounded off with cheese and wine and the opportunity of a chat whilst we raise funds for the LWT with a raffle.

I look forwarding to seeing you or hearing from you.
Best wishes
Ray Woodcock Chairman LAG

Sunday, 20 December 2015

Butterflies and Moths, Squirrels and Pine Martins,

Butterfly Conservation have published their report The State of
UK's Butterflies 2015


Introduction
This report, the fourth on the state of the UK’s butterflies, comes at a time of particularly dramatic change. Agricultural intensification and other land-use changes have caused extensive wildlife declines in the UK, which show few signs of recovery despite the best efforts of conservation organisations and substantial government expenditure.
Now, in the age of austerity and with drastic cutbacks in government funding for the environment, the prospects of halting the decline of wildlife and achieving the Aichi Biodiversity Targets set by the global Convention on Biological Diversity for the year 2020 look poor.
In addition, new research findings suggest more significant negative impacts of climate change and pesticides on our wildlife than had previously been realised, threats to essential ecosystem services such as pollination as a result of biodiversity decline, and an increased awareness of the importance of nature for human health and well-being.
Set against this bleak backdrop are some significant changes for the good. Participation in long-term recording and monitoring of the UK’s butterflies has never been stronger. In addition, new schemes such as the Wider Countryside Butterfly Survey and Big Butterfly Count have been successfully established, enhancing knowledge of the changing fortunes of our butterflies and involving tens of thousands of new recorders.

Download the whole report here.

For a related, though rather different, read try Michael McCarthy's The Moth Snowstorm.



McCarthy warns us off ecosystem services and reminds us of the joy of nature.

The 'snowstorm' of the title refers to the masses of moths that motorist used to encounter at night 40 years ago, now but a distant memory.

Another brilliant and beautiful book of loss is Horatio Clare's Orison for a Curlew, the search for the Slender-billed curlew, Numenius tenuirostris, perhaps the world's rarest bird.


More than rare in Lincolnshire, but with signs of recovery elsewhere in the British Isles, is the Pine Marten, Martes martes.  The realisation that reintroduction of Pine Martens could tip the balance against grey squirrels in favour of reds is encouraging to those who look to a re-wilding of our land. Follow these links for the story: 




Rewilding - It's all about bringing nature back to life and restoring living systems

Imagine our natural habitats growing instead of shrinking. Where space for nature is expanding beyond small pockets of reserves. Imagine species diversifying and thriving, instead of declining. That’s rewilding.

We could be a country in which bare lands spring back to life and are filled once more with trees and birdsong. We could be surrounded by the thrum of insects, colourful butterflies and moths, wildflowers and fungi. We could have beaver, boar, lynx, wolf and bluefin tuna all at home in Britain. Where they belong. Living with us. And that’s just the start.

Rewilding offers hope for wildlife, for humanity, for the planet. It’s our big opportunity to leave the world in a better state than it is today. To turn our silent spring into a raucous summer
...

Happy Christmas, Biff Vernon










Friday, 4 December 2015

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 25 NOVEMBER AT HUMBERSTONE FITTIES




A group of LAG members  walked a few metres from the car park to a sandy ridge where we set up the telescopes. The tide was definitely out with waves breaking on the water’s edge about a kilometre away. But there were exciting flashes of flickering white across the intervening sand and lagoons as small flocks of Dunlin, Knot and Oystercatchers wheeled up and back in the sunlight. However, the species that held our attention, for nearly an hour was the Brent goose. Skeins of these small, elegant black geese with their white rumps flew in from the sea at various heights and whirled around the marsh as others flew out to the water’s edge and back: a memorable sight! RWW





Thursday, 12 November 2015

London Bee Summit

Hi All,

A few notes on yesterday’s Bee Summit in London.

There were about 80 attendees at the Royal College of Physicians near Regents Park. It was organised by the Friends of the Earth and WI and was the second Bee Summit. Various stakeholders were represented: WI, FoE, BugLife, The Wildlife Trusts, NFU, Highwayd England, RSPB, CEH, Universities of Leeds, Reading, Newcastle, Soil Assoc, some locl authorities, the Landscape Institute, beekeepers, M&S, Waitrose, farmers, RHS and PAN UK.  The first Bee Summit lobbied Rupert Charles Ponsonby, 7th Baron de Mauley (the then Under Secretary of State for DEFRA) to set up the National Pollinator Strategy which was published by DEFRA last November. 

This second summit was for the Bee Coalition (including the WTs) to present on case studies of action taken on the ground since 2013; to report on what we have learned from research in the meantime and to comment on the NPS and make recommendations for Government in the areas that are thought to be weak in commitment to the initial aims set out in the first summit. FoE has launched the ‘Policies for Pollinators’ report on behalf of the Bee Coalition which highlights the issues facing pollinators and shortcomings in the NPS which need addressing.

The current Minister for DEFRA, George Eustice MP has a farming background from Cornwall. He attended to give a 10 minute address.  We were disappointed that he arrived late and left almost immediately afterwards.  He ran through the elements of the NPS but didn’t give us any of the assurances we are pressing for.  He insisted that forthcoming DEFRA cuts should not affect pollinators because Pillar 2 of the CAP should be adequate while other departments within DEFRA will be encouraged to ‘work closer together.’

Matt Shardlow, CEO of Buglife pointed out that the Governments ‘framework ‘ for monitoring and further research was not a commitment to direct any funding or to create policy. BugLife are well informed of the neonic studies so far and have synthesised a number of articles you can find here.

FoE Director Craig Bennett called for leadership from central Government in the form of policy and support which has not been forthcoming.

The science reported by Geraldine Wright from Newcastle University was very worrying concerning neonicotinoids.  The evidence that they have a bad effect on bees at even low, field level concentrations is now building strongly and residence time in soil and uptake by subsequent plant growth (even pollen and nectar strips!) is now a major concern requiring further research.  It was made clear that farming attitudes still wish to use neonicotinoids prophylactically rather than not at all or in a threshold based approach as part of Integrated Pest Management. Prof Simon Potts from Reading illustrated how pollinator-dependent crops and bee species ranges and phenology are forecasted to disconnect dramatically by 2050 given current climate change.

The Landscape Institute pushed for GI and cited its online publications that can be used to support local planning authorities and local plans.

Waitrose remains proud of its neonicotinoid-free Leckford Farm owned by the John Lewis Partnership.

The RSWTs main contribution to the Bee Coalition is the work around Bees Needs.

What we’ve been doing in Lincolnshire with Life on the Verge and the Meadow Network Project is really valued by researchers at Reading and the CEH who approached me personally.

A lot of the cited pollinator action on the ground by FoE groups was biased towards cornfield annuals in urban areas but at least it was noted that his has been very successful in just 2-3 years in raising the public’s awareness of the plight of pollinators. 

This second summit was at least a good chance to share knowledge and provide mutual encouragement for a variety of initiatives.
Big gains made so far but big challenges ahead with lots to lobby for.

Mark Schofield, Lincolnshire Wildlife Trust
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Coinciding with The Bee Summit  was the launch of a new book, A Field Guide to the Bees of Great Britain and Ireland by Steven Falk, illustrated by Richard Lewington.

A superb book, and the authors' websites are worth a visit too:

Here's a film of one our solitary bee species, a male Wool Carder Bee (Anthidium manicatum) patrolling his patch of Marsh woundwort....and some rare footage of a female carding the wool inside a nest that has been exposed.  YouTube