Tuesday 18 March 2014

Spring Woodland

Last Sunday we had fantastic weather, and where I'm staying in Berkshire I have countryside within a couple minutes walk. I therefore went out for what was supposed to be a short walk before lunch, but didn't get back until mid-afternoon.

I know the area well, and it's pretty well mapped, although there's plenty of scope for refinement because the bulk of the mapping was done purely by GPS before any aerial imagery was available. I was not planning any mapping activities at all, but as it turned out I realised this is a near perfect time for getting to grips with some of the complexities of mapping woodlands.

Wood Anemone, Bisham Woods
Wood Anemones, Bisham Woods
copyright mausboam

Bisham Woods

The Bisham Woods (now owned and managed by The Woodland Trust) are a classic example of Ancient Woodland (woods which have had continuous tree cover since 1600) in Britain. This term effectively corresponds (particularly ecologically) with the North American term old-growth or the German term Urwälder. In the British context the focus has been on establishing documentary and ecological evidence that the woods are likely to have existed since trees returned to Britain after the last Ice Age.

The earliest map showing these woods to hand is a draughtsman's drawing from 1809 for the first series of Ordnance Survey maps. This is part of a collection recently digitised and share by the British Library through Wikimedia Commons.

Pinkneys Green, Cook Dean Common and Bisham Park Wood
excerpt from 1809 Ordnance Survey drawing
Source: British Library via  Wikimedia Commons,
© Crown Copyright under Open Government Licence v1.0
Like many old woods, the Bisham Woods have been used for many purposes - Quarry Wood contains a quarry used for materials for Windsor Castle - and has, a technical term here, been buggered about: planting of non-native trees, often conifers, introduction of Rhododendron (super)ponticum (presumambly as game cover), and catastrophically unsympathetic management after massive windthrow events in the storms of October 1987 and January 1990. Since the early 1990s the Woodland Trust have been working to restore it and hope at some time to return it to being "one of the finest Orchid sites in Britain" (Crawley, 2005:195). One of the features in the woods which suggest their age are the presence of many ditches and banks which form compartments in the wood (see either Oliver Rackham's History of the Countryside and W.G. Hoskins Making of the English Landscape for many examples). Many of these compartments have their own names, and most have a distinct flora.

Ditch marking compartment boundary in Bisham Woods
Bluebell leaves can be seen carpeting the ground in the rear compartment
Before showing examples of these distinct types of woodland, it's worth saying a little about the underlying geology and geography, because some of the differences between parts of the wood have interesting causes.

Rhododendron under-storey in Bisham Woods


Geological Context

Bisham Woods mainly lies on a bluff of chalk above the River Thames. The chalk is part of a detached section of the Chilterns which lies South of the Thames, with the chalk being covered by newer strata close to the lines of the M4 Motorway, A4 road and the Great Western Railway about 5 km further South. Windsor Castle is built on another one of these outliers. A naive impression would be that the Thames may have originally flowed S of this block of chalk and more recently moved to cut it off from the remainder of the Chilterns. However, the curious change of direction which the Thames makes to travel N to Henley, then East to Marlow and finally South again at Cookham has a rather fascinating explanation: the Thames used to flow NE from Marlow!


The Thames changed course several times as various glaciations blocked this route. Additionally the land surface was different: at least some changes have occurred post-glaciation due to changes in isostay. Whatever the complexities of the full picture (and I completely fail to grasp them all), the Thames laid down river gravels some of which are now virtually at the top of the surrounding hills.  Isolated patches of these gravels sit on top of the chalk or clay creating a different soil types: in Bisham Woods they belong to the Gerrards Cross Gravels.

A thin capping of newer 'rocks' overlay the chalk in places: mainly in the Southern extension of the wood and the farmland to the East. These are the Lambeth Group. At least on Sunday their clayey nature was fairly clear where horses and cyclists had been through the wood.

Thus through some interesting changes in the areas paleogeography the woods have several different soil types. It is abundantly clear that something affects which trees grow where and this is a major factor in these woods.

If you want to explore the geology more throughly the Geological Survey have a nice viewer (unfortunately not quite getting OSM attribution right).

Goulding's Wood

The southernmost part of the Bisham Woods complex is Goulding's Wood, it forms a gore between the A309 and arable farmland and so is quite narrow at it's southern end. I did nearly all my exploring in this part of the wood.

Oak Woodland with a ground layer of Bluebells in Goulding's Wood
(should look superb in 6 weeks time)
Note the Hazel coppice stools.
At the Southern end, close to Golden Ball Lane the trees are predominantly Oak (Quercus robur) with many coppiced Hazel bushes scattered about: a classic coppice with standards woodland. It is easy to see (and walk) across the woodland floor in any direction: there are few shrubs, just the old Elder and Honeysuckle patches. At this time in Spring the ground layer is a mass of dark green : the newly unfurled leaves of Bluebells. Here and there are patches of Lesser Celandine, Dogs Mercury and Wood Anemone all now in flower. (Many of these woodland plants rely on ants to move their seeds about, see Elaiosome and Myrmechory at wikipedia). This is a common woodland type in this part of East Berkshire, I suspect that this is the W10 community in the British NVC, but don't have the reference works to confirm it.

Sycamore dominated woodland in the Northern part of Goulding's Wood
Contrast this with the appearance of the same wood a couple of hundred metres away (above)
Just after the first ditch in the wood, there are a number of obviously introduced conifers and then the wood changes to something quite different. Most noticeable is that the Bluebell leaves have gone. The woodland floor is still brown rather than green. The trees are closer together and obviously not Oaks. On closer inspection most of the trees are Sycamore (Acer pseudoplatanus) with one or two older ones showing typical bark patterns of mature Sycamore. The most immediately obvious change in the trees though is the presence of scattered cherry trees (Prunus avium), immediately recognisable by their bark.

Elsewhere returning along a separate path I came across Oak woodland with a dense field layer of Bramble, and another, larger conifer plantation. There were also scattered (planted) larches near the top end of Goulding's Wood. I didn't have time to walk to the parts of the wood on chalk which are mainly Beech woodland (although there is an admixture of ornamental and other tree oddities as well).

Old Brick Works

The last wood I visited is a bit different. This is the Old Brick Works at Pinkneys Green. It's a example of how varied the surface geology is here: the brick works used a patch of London Clay to make fancy roof tiles, many used in local housing.

Within the woods one still comes across remnants of the works: bits of old tramway, rusting machinery, slabs of concrete. The brick works closed in 1964 and the area was rapidly colonised by shrubs and trees. Much of the ground is very wet so Willows and Birches have done particularly well.


Birches with Willow catkins in background
Old Brick Works, Pinkneys Green
(note orange alga Trentepohlia on RH Birch trunk)
I made one lovely discovery in a dark corner just off the path: masses of Scarlet Elf Cup, a wonderfully photogenic fungus. Not that my photo using the phone did it any justice.

Scarlet Elf Cup Sarcoscypha sp.

This is a characteristic late winter species of Willow woodland. It seems to need frosts to appear and grows on old willow twigs in the litter of the woodland floor. (Just one illustration of why knowing what sort of woodland may be useful on a map).

The Brick Works is a classic example of how vegetation takes over places once they are no longer in use. I'm not sure exactly how to describe this plant community, but it is very similar to the willow regeneration which occurs on old Gravel Pits, with lots of Grey Willow (Salix atrocinerea) and masses of Bramble in the understorey, so probably close to the Salicion cinereae although probably lacking some indicator species in the ground layer.

Conculusions

This sunny spring day was great to notice the differences between this different types of woods. Good sunlight helped, as did the absence of leaves in the canopy. Together these really make the colours and structure of the woodland floor much more obvious. The density of standard trees and their variety are also more obvious. In Britain it is not too difficult to identify most important woodland trees even without their leaves (and even then in many cases there are old leaves in the litter). One thing which is not so easy is recognising significant plants in the ground layer at this time of year, but this didn't apply in these woods.

I would encourage anyone interested in mapping (or just enjoying) woodland to find sunny days over the next few weeks and try and photo the salient features of woods you know. I think it's much easier in many cases than trying to interpret a wood in high summer. That being said, I hope we might be able to spend the Sunday morning after State of the Map in Karlsruhe doing just that. Watch this space.

2 comments:

  1. Hello Frndz.....
    Great Information! Nice post,it is really very helpful for me.One of the few articles I’ve read today.I’m saying thanks

    Strata Managementt Windsor

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi there. Really interesting! I came to this after seeing a link saying that Bisham Quarry provided stone for Windsor Castle, and you repeat this ... but I can find nothing saying what stone this was! Maybe a hard chalk. Any ideas? Cheers Glyn

    ReplyDelete

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