The Scotsman

Cowslip survey launched to take health check of UK’S wildflower meadows

- By EMILY BEAMENT newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Wildflower enthusiast­s are being encouraged to take part in a citizen science survey of cowslips to help monitor the health of threatened meadows.

Nature charity plant life is urging the public to continue the legacy of Charles Darwin by taking a close look at the inside of cowslips to judge the genetic diversity of the flowers and the wider health of their meadow habitat.

The yellow spring flower, whose local names include cow slops, fairy cup sand bunch of keys, were once as prolific as buttercups, Plantlife said.

But they suffered marked declines between 1930 and 1980, as their ancient meadow and species-rich grass land habitat was converted to intensivel­y managed pasture and silage fields, or ploughed up for crops.

Traditiona­l meadows and grassland now cover just 1 per cent of the UK'S land area, and they are fragmented and neglected, Plantlife warned.

The charity is launching auk wide cowslip survey this April, as part of a European study which started in Estonia, looking at the centre of flowers and recording which of two types of cowslip they are.

The" s-morph" or" th rum" has male parts of the flower visible and the "L-morph" or "pin" has only the top of the female part visible.

This difference promotes cross-pollinatio­n between unrelated plants, keeping population­s healthy and robust, in a phenomenon found in some flowers which was first understood by Darwin, Plantlife said.

In healthy fields of cowslips there should be a 50:50 ratio of the two types, but it can become imbalanced when population­s become small and isolated due to loss of habitat, or because of changes to the way the land is managed.

Knowing the ratio of the cowslips in an area will help experts understand more about the quality of those grasslands, Plantlife said.

Reports from researcher­s in Estonia suggest greater instances of the S morph than the L morph in cowslip population­s, which could indicate pressures from land use change and declining habitat.

Declining genetic diversity within population­s could also make cows lips more vulnerable to climate change as they will be less able to adapt.

Cowslips, a familiar sight on verges, by footpaths and in meadows, are not themselves currently threatened because they are still widespread, according to Plantlife's Dr Trevor Dines.

But, as one of the more delicate wild flowers in meadows, which like limited competitio­n from other plants, they are crowded out once fertiliser is added to pastures.

And Dr Dines warned that 75 percent of remaining wild flower meadows and pastures are less than three acres in size, and "are in tiny fragments - there is no movement between them, they become geneticall­y isolated".

He said :" a single healthy wild flower meadow can play home to an unparallel­ed and concentrat­eddiversit­y-often with over 100 species of wild flowers from cow slip stored clover, and ox eye daisies to spectacula­r orchids.

"This floral feast in turn supports thousands of species of insects, as well as being vital for carbon capture.

"This exciting new citizen science study will allow us to examine the health of our meadows simply by focusing in on the inside of cowslip flowers," he said.

 ??  ?? ↑ Wildflower enthusiast­s are being encouraged to take part in a citizen science survey of cowslips to help monitor the health of threatened meadows
↑ Wildflower enthusiast­s are being encouraged to take part in a citizen science survey of cowslips to help monitor the health of threatened meadows

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