Redcar Field

Redcar Field
Site of Special Scientific Interest
Country England
Region North East
District Darlington
Location NZ292198
 - coordinates GB-ENG 54°34′23″N 1°32′57″W / 54.57306°N 1.54917°W / 54.57306; -1.54917Coordinates: GB-ENG 54°34′23″N 1°32′57″W / 54.57306°N 1.54917°W / 54.57306; -1.54917
Area 0.67 ha (1.66 acres)
Notification 1985
Management Natural England
Area of Search County Durham
Interest Biological
Map of England and Wales with a red dot representing the location of the Redcar Field SSSI, Co Durham
Location of Redcar Field SSSI, Co Durham
Website: Map of site

Redcar Field is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in the Darlington district of County Durham, England. It is situated just north of Darlington, about 1 km south of the village of Coatham Mundeville.

The site, which is one of the few spring-fed areas on the magnesian limestone of County Durham, has a variety of fen vegetation types such as are not found together elsewhere in the county, including the only example of fen-meadow in the region.

The fen meadow, in which blunt-flowered rush, Juncus subnodulosus, is dominant, grades into open flushes. These are carpeted with fern-leaved hook-moss, Cratoneuron filicinum, curled hook-moss, Palustriella commutata, and pointed spear-moss, Calliergon cuspidatum, and support typical fen herbs such as marsh valerian, Valeriana dioica, and early marsh orchid, Dactylorhiza incarnata.[1]

Another, and more extensive, fen type is tall fen, dominated by common reed, Phragmites australis, and great willow herb, Epilobium hirsutum. On the edge of the tall fen, the locally scarce meadow rue, Thalictrum flavum, is plentiful.

About one-quarter of the site is occupied by willow carr, dominated by crack willow, Salix fragilis, beneath which the field layer contains a mix of tall fen and woodland plants, the latter including wood avens, Geum rivale, male fern, Dryopteris filix-mas, and, at the edge of the carr, globe flower, Trollius europaeus.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 "Redcar Field" (PDF). English Nature. 1985. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
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