126 moth species now recorded in churchyard

Church_news

Since the summer of 2020 we have been recording all the plants and flowers, invertebrates and fungi that we have identified in the churchyard.  We believe this is important as the church was recorded in the Domesday Book in 1086 so the land is ancient and has many similarities to a wildflower hay meadow which has had no insecticides or ploughing  and so is very important from a biodiversity point of view.

Our identifications, as at 20th April, 2023, now total:

148 plants

204 invertebrates

34 fungi, lichens and protista

A moth trap has been used since March 2022 and, from the trap set on 10th April, the Shoulder Stripe became the 125th recorded species.  During the winter we continued to get new moths at each trap set though no moths were caught in January.   But we did have a November moth in November, a December moth in December and a Winter moth in December.  We've also had several new ones in traps in March and April increasing our total from 100 to 126!

We neatly maintain the main area where the graves are that are currently cared for by relatives and friends, but we leave other areas uncut except once a year, and other parts cut less frequently.  We have provided water for birds and animals, solitary bee and insect homes, and have cut pathways through the areas managed for wildlife to allow people to wander and see the different wildflowers and fungi at different times of the year.  We have sown 12 patches (each approx 2 sqm) with yellow rattle and mixed wildflower seed from local sources.  Rattle grows on the roots of grasses, preventing them from growing so much and allowing other wild flowers to grow naturally from seed already in the soil or from new locally sourced seed.  This is to try to help the grass to be less thick in places as we do our best to help wildlife to thrive.  If we get rattle growing we can use our own seed to do more patches in the very grassy areas.  We are pleased to be recognised as a Wildlife Friendly Garden by the Devon Wildlife Trust.

On another news item you can download fairly up-to-date records of all that has been seen and identified.