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| » Stats |
Members: 50,177
Threads: 82,408
Posts: 853,668
Top Poster: glsammy (15,069) | | Welcome to our newest member, Ruralman | |  | | 
25-03-2009, 06:15 AM
| | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: London
Posts: 3,607
| | | Re: P. elatior or false? According to the Vice County Census Catalogue native distribution is limited to Essex, Herts, Bucks, Suffolk, Cambs, Beds, Hunts and formerly Norfolk | 
25-03-2009, 09:05 AM
| | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Suffolk Coast
Posts: 2,099
| | | Re: P. elatior or false? Quote:
Originally Posted by Tiggrx According to the Vice-county Census Catalogue oxlip is recorded from South Lancashire as a neophyte. | For muppets like me who have only heard the word neophyte in religious terms
I'll save you googling neophyte - a plant that is found in an area where it had not been recorded previously
There is so much to learn from WAB | 
25-03-2009, 09:13 AM
| | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Suffolk Coast
Posts: 2,099
| | | Re: P. elatior or false? Quote:
Originally Posted by Tiggrx According to the Vice County Census Catalogue native distribution is limited to Essex, Herts, Bucks, Suffolk, Cambs, Beds, Hunts and formerly Norfolk | A good place to see it is the Suffolk Wildife Trust "Bradfield Wood", but the reserve is not intuitively "in" the Bradfield villages, so take a map by google mapping the post code
Nice wide paths (though often muddy) and primroses on hand to campare with.
Felsham Road, Bradfield St George, Bury St Edmund's IP30 0AQ
Map
OS Landranger 155
Grid reference
TL 935581 | 
25-03-2009, 05:05 PM
| | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: London
Posts: 3,607
| | | Re: P. elatior or false? Quote:
Originally Posted by Hobjob For muppets like me who have only heard the word neophyte in religious terms
I'll save you googling neophyte - a plant that is found in an area where it had not been recorded previously
There is so much to learn from WAB  | More specifically it is used in this sense to mean a naturalised species that has been introduced to a region after 1500AD
A naturalised species introduced before this date would be an archeophyte | 
26-03-2009, 07:55 PM
| | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Suffolk Coast
Posts: 2,099
| | | Re: P. elatior or false? Quote:
Originally Posted by Tiggrx More specifically it is used in this sense to mean a naturalised species that has been introduced to a region after 1500AD
A naturalised species introduced before this date would be an archeophyte |
i.e. man has had a part in it ?? or could it have got there naturally (birds etc.) ? |  | | | | Thread Tools | | | | Display Modes | Linear Mode |
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