13/05/2019
Here's Tom's report from the Wildlife Walk on Sunday. Thanks to Tom and everyone who turned up for a lovely sunny outing.
The first walk of 2019 took place in warm sunshine after a cold and at times wet week. Twelve people attended
The main purpose was to have a general look for what could be seen here in the Spring.
For most of the wildflowers it was still too early in the season but there were hints of what would follow including Teasel, Mouse-ear hawkweed and Ox-eye daisy. Those which we did find in flower included:
Hairy Bittercress
Birdsfoot Trefoil (important food plant for the Common Blue Butterfly
Creeping Cinquefoil
Dovesfoot Cranesbill
Lady’s Smock
Hawthorn
Ribwort Plantain
Thyme leaved Speedwell
Field Forget-me-not
There were single plants of both Common Storksbill and Wild Strawberry both possible first sightings on the Moss
As we walked under the trees of Birch, Alder, Oak and Pine the lack of any wildflowers was a reminder that this is a very young woodland and that most woodland specialists have taken hundreds, if not thousands of years to become established. So it was interesting to visit an area where nature is being given a helping hand by a project run by Liverpool University where a number of woodland flowers were planted several years ago. The Primroses have established and are spreading in profusion. Unfortunately they had finished flowering but the native Bluebells were doing well and looked splendid in the dappled sunshine.
The shade under the trees helped to maintain the moist conditions for mosses which were growing in abundance and ferns both dependent on moisture to reproduce.
As a former coal tip on the urban fringe, sites like Colliers Moss will be subject to a wide range of species more typical of gardens. One dramatic example of this was the small group of mature laburnum trees with their cascades of yellow pea shaped flowers near the amphitheatre
Birds were heard rather than seen although a Buzzard drifting in the blue sky above the Millennium Bridge was a good start.
Resident birds such as Blackbird, Robin, Wren and Song Thrush were all singing accompanied by the recent arrivals from Africa for the summer-Chiffchaff, Willow Warbler, Blackcap and Reed warbler.
Several of the latter were blasting out their scratchy songs in the Reeds preparing for nesting. A Reed Bunting was also seen fleetingly.
Two members of the group heard a Water Rail with its distinctive call like a pig squealing
Several Speckled Wood butterflies were seen patrolling the woodland edges, now well recovered from near extinction in the early 20th century. Orange-tips were also seen.
On alder leaves could be seen small shiny black beetles. These were Alder Leaf Beetles once rare or thought to be extinct but rediscovered in Manchester in 2004 and now common in the north west
The next walk will be on Sunday June 16th to look for orchids among other things
Tom Ferguson
May 13th 2019