Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S
                                                                                                                                                                    B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

                                                                                                   Looking after Green Shield-moss
                                                                                                   (Buxbaumia viridis) and other
                                                                                                   mosses and liverworts
                                                                                                   on dead wood
Print: crownlitho.co.uk
Design: rjpdesign.co.uk
Front cover image: B u x b a u m i a v i r i d i s capsules on an alder log Stewart Taylor, RSPB

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

Alder stands may have ideal habitat for Buxbaumia viridis © Stewart Taylor

Plantlife is the UK’s leading charity working to                 Plantlife Scotland
protect wild plants and their habitats. The charity              Balallan House
has 10,500 members and owns 23 nature reserves.                  Allan Park
In 2008, Plantlife is ‘Lead Partner’ for 77 species              Stirling
under the UK Government’s Biodiversity Action                    FK8 2QG
Plan. Conservation of these species is delivered                 Tel. 01786 478509
through the charity’s Back from the Brink species
recovery programme, which is jointly funded by                   www.plantlife.org.uk
Countryside Council for Wales, Natural England,                  scotland@plantlife.org.uk
Scottish Natural Heritage, charitable trusts,
companies and individuals. It involves its members
as volunteers (Flora Guardians) in delivering many
aspects of this work. Plantlife’s head office is in
Salisbury, Wiltshire, and the charity has national
offices in Wales and Scotland.
Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis)                   fallen away and the wood begins to rot,
The moss Buxbaumia viridis is a rare and                whereas standing dead wood, though good for
endangered species which grows on decaying              other organisms, is usually too dry for
wood, an important habitat for a whole range            bryophytes. Many of these specialist mosses
of mosses and liverworts, a group of small and          and liverworts are widespread in Scotland but
ancient plants collectively known as bryophytes.        some are rare. We do not know what precise
Buxbaumia viridis is a threatened species here          conditions on the log give rise to the most
and in Europe as a whole, and one that has              diverse stands of this community but it seems
suffered a considerable loss of available habitat.      likely that the uneven texture of the log, its
It has a scattered distribution in forest habitats      sponge-like capacity for holding moisture and,
across the northern hemisphere from south-              possibly, the nutrients released during decay
west Asia and China to western North America            are all important. Size does matter here as
but is limited to montane areas in the southern         the larger logs offer not just the obvious
part of its range.                                      greater surface area but also better buffering
                                                        against changes in humidity and greater
The habitat                                             longevity. Most Buxbaumia viridis plants are
A fallen tree provides an ideal habitat for a           associated with logs that have (or once had) a
range of bryophyte species once the bark has            diameter of more than 20cm.

This broadleaf, sheltered woodland at Abernethy Forest in Strathspey has numerous logs suitable
for Buxbaumia viridis © Stewart Taylor

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

Buxbaumia viridis capsules may be grazed probably by slugs, birds or rodents. © Stewart Taylor

The problems                                                     The species
The loss of woodland cover over the                              Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) is
centuries and, more recently, the intense                        different to virtually all other mosses in that it
management of woodland areas has led to a                        has tiny leaves which are invisible in the field;
significant loss of habitat for these bryophyte                  this means that it can only be spotted when it
species. The removal or ‘tidying up’ of fallen                   has its distinctive fruiting-body. With most
trees has been a particular problem so that                      other mosses it is the green leaves (the
the volume of dead wood, in even the least                       gametophyte) that you see frequently with
managed of our woodlands, is far below that                      small fruiting bodies (the sporophytes).
in natural woodland. In stands that have had                     Buxbaumia viridis has a relatively large capsule
little recent management, the volume of fallen                   raised on a stalk so that the whole structure is
dead wood may be in excess of 60m3 per                           about 2cm tall. The capsule is green in the
hectare, which is comparable with old-growth                     winter, turning a brownish-straw colour in
woodland in Europe and America. However, in                      summer when the millions of spores are shed.
woodland managed for timber, volumes of                          Confusion is only possible with the related
dead wood can be less than 20m3 per hectare.                     Brown shield-moss (Buxbaumia aphylla), which
The problem for these bryopyhtes is not just                     can also occur on dead wood. It is probable
one of simple loss of habitat but also lack of                   that the vegetative parts of the plant persist
continuity of habitat at any one site when the                   on logs but only produce fruiting bodies when
absolute volume of dead wood is so small.                        the conditions are favourable. As it rots away,

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
Buxbaumia viridis can be found on deadwood in
                                                  conifer plantations © Gordon Rothero

                                                  known on some 13 sites. There are two
                                                  concentrations of records, one in the glens
                                                  west of Inverness and the other in Strathspey
                                                  with a few recent records on Deeside. It
                                                  seems likely that some other sites further
                                                  west will be found, although Buxbaumia viridis
                                                  is a boreal-montane species and presumably
Confusion is only possible with the related       not suited to the wetter, milder west. It has
Brown shield-moss Buxbaumia aphylla               never been seen in southern Britain and all the
© Stewart Taylor                                  more southerly sites in Europe are associated
                                                  with mountains.
the condition of any one log will eventually
become unsuitable for Buxbaumia viridis, so       Old capsules of Buxbaumia viridis.
spore production is essential to enable the       © Stewart Taylor
plant to move on. The number of capsules
produced each year is therefore critical.

Green Shield-moss grows on dead wood from
a range of trees, both broadleaf and conifer,
and may persist even when the wood is very
fragmented, even occurring on the wood chips
on old anthills. It usually grows on softer,
fibrous dead wood but has also been found on
the bark of dead alder.

All the UK records for Buxbaumia viridis are in
the north and east of Scotland, extending from
East Ross in the north and, historically, to
Arbroath in Angus in the south. It is currently

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

    0

    9

    8

            Key to symbols
    7        1950 onward
             Pre 1950í

                                                                 Anastrophyllum hellerianum is a tiny, nationally
    6                                                            scarce liverwort that grows on dead wood
                                                                 © Gordon Rothero
        0           1        2    3        4         5

                                                                 green patches of flat fronds. All of the other,
Map created using DMAP                                           more frequent, associates of Buxbaumia viridis
                                                                 in the table below are very common species in
In the United Kingdom, Buxbaumia viridis is                      a variety of habitats and not just on rotting
rated as Endangered in the bryophyte Red                         wood. Two nationally scarce species also occur
Data Book (by Church et al., 2001), has a                        on similar logs: Anastrophyllum hellerianum
Biodiversity Action Plan and is listed on                        which is a tiny liverwort with yellow stems
Schedule 8 of the Wildlife and Countryside                       tipped with dark red, and Calypogeia suecica
Act. The Endangered threat category means                        which forms flat whitish, green patches but
that the plant is deemed to be at a very high                    needs a microscope for confirmation.
risk of extinction in the wild because of its
small range and patchy distribution and the                      The liverworts Nowella curvifolia (shown below)
small number of plants in total. It is also listed               and Riccardia palmata are perhaps the best
in Annex II of the EC Habitats and Species                       indicator species of the right kind of conditions
Directive and on Appendix 1 of the Council of                    for Buxbaumia viridis. © Gordon Rothero
Europe Bern Convention. Its listing on
Schedule 8 means that is illegal to collect the
plant without a licence.

Perhaps the best indicator species of the right
kind of conditions for Buxbaumia viridis are the
two liverworts Nowellia curvifolia and Riccardia
palmata. These two species are common on
rotten logs in humid sites, Nowellia curvifolia
forming distinctive copper-coloured patches of
thin stems and Riccardia palmata forming dense

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

Buxbaumia viridis growing amidst associated      Site management
species of lichens and bryophytes at             The most important management message is
Rothiemurchus © Gordon Rothero                   the most simple: leave all fallen timber. For
                                                 some amenity woodlands there may be health
                                                 and safety issues over trees near paths but
                                                 otherwise all wood should be left where it falls.
                                                 Obviously not all dead wood is suitable for
                                                 bryophytes, particularly those dry, stark, grey
                                                 remains of old trees in open, heathy pine
                                                 woodland, although these do provide an
                                                 important habitat for other organisms. The
                                                 Forest Enterprise booklet Life in the Deadwood
                                                 provides a wealth of information on the general
                                                 importance of deadwood in woodland and
                                                 suggests that a minimum of 5m3 per hectare of
                                                 logs of 20cm diameter should be the aim.
                                                 Studies in Sweden suggest that the best
 Percentage frequency of                         predictor of the occurrence of Buxbaumia viridis
 associated species on five logs                 is the volume of large dead wood on a site.
 with Buxbaumia viridis.
                                                 In semi-natural woodlands there should be a
 Species                        Frequency        policy of increasing the amount of large fallen
 Dicranum scoparium                  80%         timber, often termed ‘coarse woody debris’.
 Lophocolea bidentata                60%         This may be a passive policy of not clearing
 Mnium hornum                        60%         fallen timber which will gradually increase the
 Dicranum fuscescens                 40%         volume of dead wood, or an active policy of
 Hylocomium splendens                40%         felling or uprooting selected trees where the
 Lepidozia reptans                   40%         woodland can sustain this kind of
 Lophozia ventricosa                 40%         management. Most sites for Buxbaumia viridis
 Oxalis acetosella                   40%         are close to watercourses, possibly because of
 Pohlia nutans                       40%         the increased humidity on such sites, and
 Riccardia palmata                   40%         increasing the amount of dead wood in such
 Cladonia sp                         10%         sites would have added value.
 Deschampsia flexuosa                10%
 Eurhynchium praelongum              10%         A large proportion of the woodland within the
 Nowellia curvifolia                 10%         stronghold areas for Buxbaumia viridis in north
 Pinus seedling                      10%         eastern Scotland is commercial plantation with
 Rhytidiadelphus loreus              10%         a relatively short rotation. Such woodland
 Tetraphis pellucida                 10%         may have a lot of dead wood but most of it
 Tritomaria exsectiformis            10%         tends to be too small for Buxbaumia viridis.
                                                 Extending the rotation on at least some of these

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

sites would increase the volume of coarse                        sheltered but that will not be too shaded by
woody debris. Within the plantations there are                   the new crop of trees. This is best done during
usually areas with some broadleaf woodland,                      felling when the appropriate machinery is on
often along watercourses, and these offer an                     site. The area of available habitat would be
opportunity for habitat creation. Felling a few                  increased if the logs were not in neat stacks.
large trees from the edge of the plantation into
such areas, possibly during harvesting, would                    Continuity of supply
provide a habitat for the future. Although such                  Decaying wood is a habitat with a finite
sites might initially be too open and dry on a                   lifetime; eventually the log will rot away and be
clear-fell site, once the re-stock trees are big                 absorbed into the woodland floor. Buxbaumia
enough to provide shelter, the dead trees will                   viridis is able to persist on small fragments long
have decayed enough to offer suitable habitat.                   after the log has fallen apart but eventually it
Similarly, it would also be possible to leave                    will die out. To ensure the continuity of the
tangles of wind-throw to become a patch of                       community of rotten log species on any site,
dead wood within the re-stock site, allowing                     there will need to be a supply of logs some of
sufficient distance between the logs and the new                 which already have the bryophytes, some which
crop so that enough light can penetrate.                         are just coming into the right condition for
                                                                 colonisation and yet more that are just fallen.
When a patch of woodland is clear-felled, there                  The period over which a log remains in suitable
are always large, cut logs left on the site. In                  condition will vary; conifer logs seem to remain
some situations it may be possible to use these                  viable for much longer than birch which falls
to create suitable habitat if they can be moved                  apart rather quickly. So a flexible approach will
to appropriate sites that are relatively                         be needed depending on the type of woodland.

Buxbaumia viridis is found on this fallen log resting on a dry stone wall at Rothiemurchus, Strathspey.
© Gordon Rothero

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Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

RSPB Abernethy National Nature                           RSPB are working hard to increase the amount of
Reserve – a case study of pro-active                     dead wood at Abernethy Forest, a stronghold for
deadwood management                                      Buxbaumia viridis © Stewart Taylor

A key objective of the RSPB’s management plan            Methods used include totem poling by pole
for Abernethy Forest is the development of a             saw, harvester and by tree surgeon, ring-
self-sustaining native forest of natural character.      barking or other damage to the lower trunk
One attribute of this natural character is the           (all to create standing dead wood), felling at
abundance and frequency of dead wood. At                 ground level or to leave a high stump, and
Abernethy, at least 40% of the BAP, Red Data             winching with hand or tractor winch (all to
Book, Nationally Rare or Nationally Scarce               create fallen wood).
non-avian species found in woodland areas are
associated with deadwood. However, in most               Creation of deadwood is integrated with
areas of the forest, current deadwood                    other management aims, including maintaining
frequency and volumes are as little as 5 – 10%           minority broadleaf species and juniper, or to
of that which is recorded from more natural              enhance areas of blaeberry.
boreal forests in Scandinavia and North West
Russia, the closest analogies to Abernethy in            The RSPB use a variety of techniques to create
continental Europe.                                      deadwood, such as pulling trees over with a
                                                         tractor and winch. © Stewart Taylor.
The RSPB have identified approximately1600 ha
of Scots pine plantations more than 40 years
old in Abernethy, within which woodland
restructuring will be by a rolling programme of
deadwood creation. No timber will be
extracted. Their aim is to ensure a continuity of
standing and fallen deadwood in both space and
time. As a minimum, they aim to ensure that
1m3 of fresh deadwood is created in each
                                                                                                                  7
hectare over a five to ten year cycle.
Looking after Green Shield-moss (Buxbaumia viridis) and other mosses and liverworts on dead wood
B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

Summary of management                                            Who to contact for advice
recommendations for Green Shield-                                If you think you have Buxbaumia viridis in your
moss (Buxbaumia viridis)                                         woodland and would like some specialist
Even the most simple management to increase                      support, then please contact:
the volume of dead wood will be worthwhile.
                                                                 Plantlife Scotland
●   Include a deadwood policy in the site
    management plan                                              Balallan House
●   Leave all fallen trees in situ.                              Allan Park
●   Leave individual logs, not neatly stacked                    Stirling
    piles.                                                       FK8 2QG
●   Actively manage and fell to create                           Tel 01786 478509
    deadwood logs of at least 20cm diameter,
    during routine forestry operations, aiming                   www.plantlife.org.uk
    for a minimum of 5m3 per ha.                                 scotland@plantlife.org.uk
●   Favour sites adjacent to watercourses or
    sheltered, humid areas for deadwood                          British Bryological Society
    creation and retention.
●   Ensure a continuous supply of coarse                         c/o Gordon Rothero
    woody debris.                                                Stronlonag
●   Extend rotation of commercial                                Glenmassan
    compartments if possible, to increase the                    Dunoon
    volume of coarse woody debris.                               Argyll
●   Utilise broadleaf areas within commercial                    PA23 8RA
    stands to create deadwood habitat.
●   Fell a few trees from commercial                             gprothero@aol.com
    compartments into broadleaf areas.
●   Leave tangles of wind-throw to become a
    patch of dead wood within re-stock sites,                    This leaflet was written for Plantlife Scotland
    allowing sufficient distance between the                     by Gordon Rothero, Bryologist
    logs and new crops so that enough light
    can penetrate.
●   Where possible, move remaining logs in
    clear fell areas to more suitable sites.

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B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

         Buxbaumia viridis capsule. © Stewart Taylor

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B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S
  B A C K F RO M T H E B R I N K M A N A G E M E N T S E R I E S

  Damper woodlands within RSPB Abernethy Caledonian pine forest in Strathspey are a stronghold for
  Buxbaumia viridis © Stewart Taylor

                                                                                                                  Pri nt : crow nl i t ho. co. uk
   British Lichen Society

                                        www.plantlife.org.uk

                                                                                                                  De si gn : r j p de si gn. co. uk
                                     scotland@plantlife.org.uk

                                                                                                                  F ro nt c ov er im a ge: B u x b a u m i a v i r i d i s c aps ul es o n an al de r l og St ew ar t T ayl or , R SP B

                            Plantlife International – The Wild Plant Conservation Charity
                                                    Plantlife Scotland
                                      Balallan House, Allan Park, Stirling FK8 2QG
                                                   Tel. 01786 478509

                                       ISBN: 978-1-904749-41-7 © October 2008

    Plantlife International – The Wild Plant Conservation Charity is a charitable company limited by guarantee.
       Registered Charity Number: 1059559 Registered Company Number: 3166339. Registered in England
                                    Charity registered in Scotland no. SC038951
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