BSBI News September 2021

Page 47

ADVENTIVES AND ALIENS: Rumex thyrsiflorus in Surrey

Rumex thyrsiflorus Fingerh. in Surrey (v.c. 17) GEORGE HOUNSOME

W

hile walking along the cycleway on the west side of the Guildford Road north of Ottershaw, Surrey in July 2020, I noticed a plant with an unfamiliar jizz on the ‘wrong’ side of a fence, so I leapt over for a closer inspection. It was a sorrel (Rumex sp.) unlike any I’d seen before, multistemmed and about 45 cm tall. The basal leaves were virtually gone but the stem leaves were narrow, much longer than wide, strongly sagittate, acute and with very wavy edges. The inflorescence was diffuse, much-branched with very small flowers and female. It was growing in a forest of Melilotus albus (White Melilot) and other ruderals. I later found another plant a few metres away on the ‘right’ side of that fence, at TQ 02414 64255, also female and with a few dilapidated basal leaves. A conversation with Eric Clement produced the name Rumex thyrsiflorus Fingerh., a taxon completely new to me, so I sent photographs to Geoffrey Kitchener and John Akeroyd, the BSBI Rumex referees, for their opinions and they agreed that the name was correct, confirmed by Eric on receipt of a pressed specimen. It is closely related to the variable Rumex acetosa L. and may be confused with it, but the narrow, undulate, cauline leaves, becoming progressively narrower towards the top of the plant, and generally smaller valves of the fruit, 2.5–3 mm rather than 3–4.5 mm, set it apart. It also looks quite different, with a denser, mistierlooking inflorescence, although I must confess that this observation is based on a sample of only two plants. They set no ripe seeds. Flora Europaea has a description and key, and Blamey & Grey-Wilson (1989) has a drawing. There are descriptions in several online floras. There are no records in the BSBI Distribution Database but Clement & Foster (1994) mentions an unconfirmed pre-1930 record from Sark in the Channel Islands; the stated islet of Brechou is incorrect (E.J. Clement, pers. comm.). There is a

Rumex thyrsiflorus at Ottershaw, Surrey (v.c. 17), showing general habit. Photographs by the author

confirmed record from Lanarkshire (Macpherson & McKean, 2014). The plant is a native of Central and Eastern Europe and is spreading across the rest of the continent as predicted in Lousley & Kent (1981), Akeroyd (2014) and, incidentally, by Rechinger, K.H. fil. personally to John Akerord in 1987! Sites on the internet give it the vernacular name Pyramidal Sorrel, but as it is not (yet) a British plant, how can it have an English name? Maybe that’s a translation from the name in one of the BSBI NEWS 148 | September 2021

45


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
BSBI News September 2021 by Botanical Society of Britain & Ireland - Issuu