Motivated by last year’s fern forays and spurred on by my new membership of the British Pteridological Society, I have decided to try something different this year: a personal challenge to see as many of Britain’s fern species as possible in a single year. The idea being that, by seeking out our ferns, I’ll learn more about them, their habitats, and the subtleties involved in identifying them. This blog will be part #7.
A Few Scarce Ferns – 26 April
When it comes to our rarer ferns, it’s often best not to share precise locations. I’ll usually take cues from what trusted organisations and recorders have made public. Still, even then, the vulnerability of some populations makes it sensible to err on the side of caution. So, no grid references or site names this time, but suffice it to say that with spring getting underway, it felt like the right moment to head out in search of some of our more elusive pteridophytes. Cue a long drive away from Newcastle…
Our first stop was in pursuit of a particular favourite: Moonwort Botrychium lunaria. This curious little plant of calcareous grasslands, spoil heaps and old mine workings has become something of a personal nemesis – frequently eluding targeted searches, only to appear when least expected. On this occasion, however, I had a good idea where to look and despite it being a touch early in the season, was pleased to find the first fronds just beginning to emerge from the tightly grazed turf of an upland fell.
It’s a delightful species, though I’ll admit it, it doesn’t look like much early in the year.
The second target fern was rather more dependable. Holly-fern Polystichum lonchitis is a striking species, its tough, tapering fronds lending it a distinctive, almost architectural quality. It tends to favour the most inaccessible of habitats, occupying cool, well-drained niches at the base of cliffs, on shaded ledges, and among boulder scree. As such, it’s one of those ferns that usually demands a bit of effort to see.
Our plant, it must be said, was looking a little the worse for wear, with just a handful of fresh fronds emerging from a clump of last year’s browned foliage. Still, it very much counted. With any luck, I’ll come across more robust specimens when I make it to Scotland later in the year.
Not to be overlooked, the day also brought encounters with two particularly appealing lycophytes: Fir Clubmoss Huperzia selago and Lesser Clubmoss Selaginella selaginoides. Alongside these were a suite of more familiar upland ferns, rounding off a thoroughly satisfying trip.
An Unusual Escape – 27 April
Fast forward to Sunday and, rather unexpectedly, a guided walk with a local Friends group turned up another addition to the fern list. And an unlikely one at that. The rather impressive specimen pictured below proved to be Western Sword-fern Polystichum munitum, a North American species recorded from only a handful of sites nationally, according to the BSBI.
To encounter it in Holywell Dene, North Tyneside, was something of a surprise, and I’ll admit it took a bit of working through before the penny dropped. It is most likely a garden escape, but either way, it appears to represent the first known occurrence for South Northumberland.
Woodland Specialists – 5 May
Whilst I’ve covered that particular trip in more detail elsewhere, a Bank Holiday wander at Cupola Banks above the River Allen yielded the next two ferns for the year. Oak Fern Gymnocarpium dryopteris and Beech Fern Phegopteris connectilis are, in truth, among my favourites. While not especially rare in a national context, they are decidedly scarce in my part of the world.
Both species favour rugged, humid upland woodland that has remained largely undisturbed, often growing in spots that seem either inaccessible or of little interest to grazing animals. Delicate and rather pretty, they are among our most elegant ferns, and I never tire of seeing them.
Running Total
Seeing as I rarely carry a notebook, we’ll log our running total for the year here…
| #1 Wall-rue | Asplenium ruta-muraria | 16 January, Newcastle |
| #2 Maidenhair Spleenwort | Asplenium trichomanes subsp. quadrivalens | 16 January, Newcastle |
| #3 Hart’s-tongue | Asplenium scolopendrium | 16 January, Newcastle |
| #4 Black Spleenwort | Asplenium adiantum-nigrum | 16 January, Newcastle |
| #5 Broad Buckler-fern | Dryopteris dilatata | January, Newcastle |
| #6 Male-fern | Dryopteris filix-mas | January, Newcastle |
| #7 Soft Shield-fern | Polystichum setiferum | January, Newcastle |
| #8 Japanese Lace Fern | Polystichum polyblepharum | January, Newcastle |
| #9 Hard Shield-fern | Polystichum aculeatum | January, Newcastle |
| #10 Hard Fern | Blechnum spicant | January, Newcastle |
| #11 Western Scaly Male-fern | Dryopteris affinis subsp. affinis | January, Newcastle |
| #12 Borrer’s Scaly Male-fern | Dryopteris borreri | January, Newcastle |
| #13 Lady Clermont’s Spleenwort | Asplenium x clermontiae | January, Northumberland |
| #14 Rustyback | Asplenium ceterach | January, Northumberland |
| #15 N/A | Dryopteris borreri morph. robusta | February, County Durham |
| #16 N/A | Dryopteris borreri forma foliosum | February, County Durham |
| #17 Greater Scaly Male-fern | Dryopteris affinis subsp. paleaceolobata | March, Newcastle |
| #18 Tunbridge Filmy-fern | Hymenophyllum tunbrigense | March, Northumberland |
| #19 Lady-fern | Athyrium filix-femina | April, Newcastle |
| #20 Adder’s-tongue | Ophioglossum vulgatum | April, Newcastle |
| #21 Delicate Maidenhair Spleenwort | Asplenium trichomanes subsp. trichomanes | April, North Yorkshire |
| #22 Narrow Male-fern | Dryopteris cambrensis | April, North Yorkshire |
| #23 Green Spleenwort | Asplenium viride | April, North Yorkshire |
| #24 Parsley Fern | Cryptogramma crispa | April, North Yorkshire |
| #25 Moonwort | Botrychium lunaria | April, N/A |
| #26 Holly Fern | Polystichum lonchitis | April, N/A |
| #27 Oblong Woodsia | Woodsia ilvensis | April, N/A |
| #28 Western Sword-fern | Polystichum munitum | April, Northumberland |
| #29 Oak Fern | Gymnocarpium dryopteris | May, Northumberland |
| #30 Beech Fern | Phegopteris connectilis | May, Northumberland |
