|
Agrimonia procera |
Eight
localized sites recorded, only three confirmed post 2000 |
|
Achillea ptarmica |
declining due to drainage/overgrazing of damp acid grassland |
|
Agrostis canina |
now
getting increasingly scarce through loss of damp acid grassland |
|
Agrostis vinealis |
only a handful of sites recorded acid heathland |
|
Aira caryophyllea |
now
very scarce due to habitat loss |
|
Alchemilla filicaulis
subsp.
vestita |
formerly at Aubrey Buxton N.R. now believed
to be extinct. |
|
Alisma lanceolatum |
only a handful of records, doubtfully native in most cases |
|
Ammophila arenaria |
very local, sand dunes, but now extensively colonizing new
sand bars off Jaywick |
|
Anacamptis pyramidalis |
abundant in a handful of sites on the chalk, otherwise sporadic
but widespread and often abundant on verges |
|
Anagallis minima |
only now known from Tiptree Heath |
|
Anagallis tenella |
only now known from Lingwood Common, formerly Old Woman's Weaver Marsh, Hatfield Forest
and Danbury Common but
not seen in resent years |
|
Anisantha tectorum |
two
known sites |
|
Anthemis arvenis |
a
rapidly declining cornfield weed, virtually confined to the
Tendring Penninsula where still wiodespread. |
|
Anthemis cotula |
formerly widespread cornfield weed, now absent from much of the
county, but still widepsread in NE quarter of county |
|
Anthyllis vulneraria
subsp. vulneraria |
confined to the chalk and calcareous gravel pits, and some
verges but declining due
to destruction of habitat |
|
Apium inundatum |
on
verge of extinction due to Crassula helmsii blankets,
only one
site, on Epping Forest. Not seen recently. |
|
Arabis hirsuta |
only occasional casual plants in Essex |
|
Asperula cynanchica
subsp.
cynanchica |
extinct, last seen 1965 (frequenly confused with Sherardia
arvensis) |
|
Asplenium adiatum-nigrum |
declining due to `do-gooder’ cleanups of churchyard and railway
bridge brickwork |
|
Asplenium ruta-muraria |
still widely distributed but declining rapidly due to cleaning
up of brick/stone walls |
|
Asplenium trichomanes
|
still widely distributed but declining rapidly due to cleaning
up of brick/stone walls |
|
Astragalus glycyphyllos |
scattered on the chalk and chalky boulder clay, declining |
|
Athyrium felix-femina |
decreasing due to closing in of wet woodland sites and light loss,
but still widespread |
|
Atriplex glabriuscula |
currently still widespread but endangered by coastal development |
|
Atriplex laciniata |
very local, coastal sands in the NE |
|
Atriplex longipes |
only one record, may be overlooked |
|
Atropa bella-dona |
formerly scattered on the chalk, now largely urban and coastal
casual |
|
Baldelia ranunculoides |
extinct |
|
Berberis vulgaris |
only a few scattered bushes left, declining due to grubbing of
hedges |
|
Berula erecta |
declining due to drainage of swampy sites |
|
Bidens cernua |
declining due to deterioration/infilling of ponds |
|
Bletchnum spicant |
now rare, sporadic in no more than 3-4 sites at any one time |
|
Blysmus compressus |
two
locations in Hatfield Forest only |
|
Botrychium lunaria |
probably extinct, curious unlocalised Atlas 1962 records for TM
and TR |
|
Brachypodium pinnatum |
very rare, only a handful of records |
|
Bromus arvensis |
probably extinct, as elsewhere in Britain, last seen c.1970. |
|
Bromus lepidus |
drastic decline, few recent records, abundant on Fingringhoe
Ranges |
|
Bromus racemosus |
damp meadows,
where declining rapidly but increasingly abuundant in marginal
arable |
|
Bromus secalinus |
persists at several sites in Upminster and Basildon areas and in
NW |
|
Callitriche brutia ssp. brutia |
only known from Dagenham Chase, possibly overlooked |
|
Campanula glomerata |
rapidly declining, only one site now on the chalky boulder clay,
scattered on the chalk |
|
Campanula rotundifolia |
spectacular decline in the last 20 yrs, now very rare |
|
Cardamine amara |
declining rapidly through drainage of Dunmow soil seepages |
|
Carex acuta |
rapidly declining due to drainage of valley marshes |
|
Carex binervis |
abundant in Epping Forest but declining elsewhere in the county |
|
Carex caryophyllea |
probably under recorded, but declining due to loss of short damp
grassland |
|
Carex dioica |
extinct, old record from Galleywood Common |
|
Carex distans |
only a handful of scattered records coastal saline marshes and
dyke edges, declining due to loss of
habitat |
|
Carex disticha |
declining due to loss of damp meadows/fens. Increasing in Roding
Valley fen. |
|
Carex demissa (viridula
subsp. oedocarpa) |
a
sedge of acid heath, rapidly declining due to loss of habitat,
but seed can persist and reappears sporadically |
|
Carex divulsa
susbsp. leersii |
scattered on calcareous soils in the north-west and along the
coast on shelky sands |
|
Carex echinata |
opened
up acid bogs, only seen recently in Epping Forest, Galleywood
Common and in Pheasanthouse Wood Bog. |
|
Carex laevigata |
down to a handfulof sites, declining due to loss of habitat |
|
Carex nigra |
formerly widespread in wet heath/marshy sites, now rapidly
declining |
|
Carex pallescens |
a
scarce plant of woodland rides, declining due to lack of
coppicing, also overlooked. |
|
Carex panicea |
only a few scattered extant sites |
|
Carex paniculata |
now
very rare, due to destruction of sedge beds |
|
Carex pulicaris |
now
extinct |
|
Carex rostrata |
last but one native site ploughed up, the other
excavated for a pond despite SINC status! New introduction
Shenfield Common pond. |
|
Carex strigosa |
declining due to overgrowth of woodland streams, ditches and
visitor trampling of damp woodland rides |
|
Carex x subgracilis |
one
known site, Walthamstow marshes |
|
Carex vesicaria |
the only recent record fropm the reedmace pool, Backwarden
Reserve, Danbury |
|
Carlina vulgaris |
a
drastic decline except on the chalk, status needs reassessing |
|
Catabrosa aquatica |
24 records, a grass of cattle
trampled river and pond margins, overlooked but also decreasing. |
|
Catapodium marinum |
very local on the coast, but now spreading inland along salted
verges |
|
Centaureum pulchellum |
formerly in chalk and gravel pits (still in 2 sites) around Grays and 3 woods in north
central Essex, Matching Airfield, declining |
|
Cephalanthera damasonium |
probably now extinct as native, one recent casual record on lime
patch in Vc18. |
|
Cerastium arvense |
declining rapidly, only four recent records |
|
Cerastium diffusum |
declining, due to trampling/loss of short coastal turf |
|
Cerastium semidecandrum |
declining and sporadic, but somewhat overlooked |
|
Ceratophyllum submersum |
declining, c.55 monads scattered along
coast line, numeous misidentifications due to flaccid form of
emersum. |
|
Ceterach officinarum |
only two colonies now known |
|
Chaenorhinum minus |
formerly common in cornfields, now mainly along railway tracks |
|
Chenopodium bonus-henricus |
sporadic, around dairy farmyards, less common than formerly.
much confusion with large Atriplex species |
|
Chenopdium glaucum |
West Thurrock silt lagoons and Gunners
Park |
|
Chenopodium murale |
c.15 scattered ephemeral records |
|
Chenopodium urbicum |
very rare, only one recent record Foulness |
|
Chrysanthemum segetum |
not seen in the wild recently,
quite frequently ephemerally established in wild flower mixtures
on verges |
|
Chrysosplenium alternifolium |
rare, only a handful of sites all of which need checking,
extinct in Vc18 |
|
Chrysosplenium oppositifolium |
still widespread, but has been lost from several sites recently |
|
Cirsium acaule |
virtually extinct on the chalky boulder clay, a few scattered
sites on the chalk of the N W and around Grays. |
|
Cirsium dissectum |
extinct last seen near Strawberryhill Pond in Epping Forest. |
|
Cirsium eriophorum |
in
a few remaining meadows on the chalk of the N W |
|
Clinopodium acinos |
virtually extinct, due to scrubbing over of chalk rock outcrops
in the Saffron Walden area, accasional arable fields on chal;k. |
|
Clinopodium ascendens |
rare in Essex, only known from verges on the
chalk around Chesterford and Lamarsh and a few scattered sites
elswhere |
|
Cochlearea anglica |
scattered, coastal marshes, particularly along the Thames |
|
Cochlearea officinalis |
distribution uncertain due to confusion with forms of C.
danica |
|
Coeloglossum viride |
extinct |
|
Convallaria majalis |
declining as a native due to neglect of ancient woods, often in
wood margins as garden throw out |
|
Crepis biennis |
one
permanent site near Littlebury, occasional as a casual elsewhere |
|
Crithmum maritimum |
somewhat sporadic on shingle and cliffs, Colne Point round to
Walton, recent expansion on concrete sea walls at Jaywick |
|
Cruciata laevipes |
a
few scattered sites on the chalk of the NW and in Grays Chalk
Pit (introduced?) |
|
Cuscuta epithymum |
probably extinct |
|
Cynoglossum officinale |
dramatic decline, only a few scattered extant sites, but
expanding its range in Hatfield Forest |
|
Dactylorhiza incarnata |
now
very rare and impermanent |
|
Dactylorhiza maculata
subs. ericetorum |
a
small colony in Epping Forest, large one in Mill Meadows,
Billericay and in South Weald Park. |
|
Dactylorhiza praetermissa |
only a few scattered sites, often ephemeral in gravel workings
or on fly ash |
|
Dipsacus pilosus |
a
small number of scattered records along our main river valleys,
& in damp woods |
|
Drosera intermedia |
single site in Epping Forest, declining with cessation of
grazing |
|
Drosera rotundifolia |
now
down to one
site in Epping Forest. |
|
Dryopteris affinis subsp. affinis |
numerous scattered plants now known |
|
Dryopteris affinis subsp. borreri |
very local, often hybridised out |
|
Dryopteris carthusiana |
still
well scattered in boggy sites across the county but declining
through loss of habitat |
|
Eleocharis uniglumis |
one
newly discovered site in Dagnam Park (now gone|), one unconfirmed site
Holland Brook |
|
Eleogiton fluitans |
still present in a few ponds in Epping Forest and Danbury
Backwarden. |
|
Epilobium obscurum |
declining due to drainage/drying out/overgrowth of boggy streams |
|
Epilobium palustre |
a
scattering of sites, but rapidly declining due to drainage or
overgrowing of boggy sites and hybridization with E. obscurum. |
|
Epipactis helleborine |
declining due to grazing by deer |
|
Epipactis palustris |
One colony silt lagoons West Thurrock, now
extinct in Grays Chalk Pit. |
|
Epipactis purpurata |
a
small scattering of woods in north central Essex, grazed off by
deer |
|
Equisetum fluviatile |
very local, declining due to neglect of ponds |
|
Equisteum sylvaticum |
Epping Forest, Thames Valley stream,
Galleywood Common bog, and at Donyland. Several records
due to branched form of E. arvense. |
|
Erica cinerea |
confined to Tiptree Heath & Roman River Valley, introd.
Galleywood Common and Fingringhoe Wick |
|
Erica tetralix |
Epping Forest, Tiptree Heath, Totham Pits, Thundersley |
|
Eriophorum angustifolium |
confined to Sunshine Plain and Lodge Road Bog North in Epping
Forest |
|
Eryngium maritimum |
scarce, Canvey (now gone), Shoebury, Mersea, Colne Point-St Osyth, Jaywick-Clacton,
Walton-Dovercourt. Colonizing new sand bars off Jaywick. |
|
Euphrasia anglica |
probably overlooked, one record from Harlow |
|
Euphrasia nemorosa |
catastrophic decline due to neglect of woodland clearings/rides
& suitable pastures |
|
Falcaria vulgaris |
c.4
persistent colonies in the county |
|
Filipendula vulgaris |
very rare, one recent record from Boreham, and one from
Thornwood (introduced), otherwise possibly
now extinct |
|
Frangula alnus |
a
rare tree, only a few scattered sites, declining due to habitat
loss, doing well Danbury Common after scrub clearance. |
|
Fritillaria meleagris |
probably now extinct, the numerous plants at Warley have all?
been stolen |
|
Galeopsis speciosa |
not
seen recently |
|
Galium palustre
subsp. elongatum |
very rare, boggy fens |
|
Galium ordoratum |
very local, a few ancient woods and churchyards |
|
Galium uliginosum |
rare, declining with loss of habitat |
|
Genista anglica |
declining, now confined to a few patches Hainault
Forest, and one on Epping Forest |
|
Genista tinctoria |
catastrophic decline due to loss of permanent grassland and
over-grazing of sea walls |
|
Gentianella amarella
|
now
extinct in north Essex, only now known from Grays Chalk pit NR
(3 plants but not sen recently) |
|
Geranium columbinum |
two recent
records |
|
Geranium pratense |
now
virtually confined to road verges, vulnerable to flailing |
|
Geranium rotundifolium |
scattered along the Thames foothills plus a few sites inland,
appears to be increasing inland |
|
Geranium sanguineum |
thought to be native on chalk at Wendens Ambo, otherwise
occasional as garden throwout, and as 'memorial' plant in Epping
Forest |
|
Geum rivale |
pond on Fairmead, Epping Forest, and Crowney Wood |
|
Geum x intermedium |
confined to Crowney Wood |
|
Glaucium flavum |
scarce, on a few sandy/gravelly beaches, seldom in quantity |
|
Groenlandia densa |
almost extinct, recorded from c. 4 sites in recent decades |
|
Gymnodenia conopsea |
a few ephemeral records Grays area, and large expanding colony on East Tilbury marshes
silt lagoon |
|
Helianthemum nummularium |
declining rapidly on the Chalky Boulder Clay due to verge
flailing, plus a few sites on chalk |
|
Helictotrichon pratense |
declining through loss of calcareous grassland, only a
scattering of recent records |
|
Helictotrichon pubescens |
probably extinct |
|
Helleborus viridis |
only two sites now known |
|
Hieracium acuminatum |
rapidly declining due to flailing of heathland |
|
Hieracium calcaricola |
only a handful of sites, declining due to heathland flailing |
|
Hieracium argillaceum |
only two sites known, Buckhurst Hill verge, and Woodredon Hill
verge |
|
Hieracium eboracense |
rapidly declining due to heathland flailing, only now known from
Danbury Common |
|
Hieracium lepidulum |
declining due to scrubbing over of chalk pit and woodland sites |
|
Hieracium salticola |
declining due to flailing of heathland |
|
Hieracium scotostictum |
garden escape, three sites known |
|
Hieracium trichocaulon |
handful of sites, declining due to heathland flailing |
|
Hieracium umbellatum |
drastic decline due to heathland flailing, handful of sites |
|
Hippocrepis comosa |
extinct |
|
Hottonia palustris |
rapidly decling due to infilling of ponds |
|
Hydrocotyle vulgaris |
very local, acid pond margins, has to compete with Crassula
helmsii in many sites |
|
Hyoscyamus niger |
very rare and declining, arable on calcareous soils and on
coastal sands |
|
Hypericum x desetangsii |
probably overlooked, only a few records |
|
Hypericum elodes |
now
confined to one site, Wake Valley Pond, Epping Forest |
|
Hypericum maculatum subsp.
obtusiusculum |
not
yet confirmed for the county (mostly x desetangsii|) |
|
Hypericum pulchrum |
scattering of records on acid soils, declining, particularly in
Epping Forest |
|
Inula conyzae |
frequent locally on the chalk around Grays, virtually absent
elsewhere |
|
Jasione montana |
massive decline since the Gibson era, single extant site at
Shoebury |
|
Juncus ambiguous |
single sites on Foulness, Fobbing Marshes, Wennington Marshes and at Jaywick |
|
Juncus bulbosus |
declining rapidly due to drainage, except in Epping forest |
|
Juncus compressus |
about half a dozen sites, most of which need reconfirming |
|
Juncus squarrous |
Epping Forest (declining), Tiptree Heath & Roman River valley |
|
Juncus subnodulosus |
on
the verge of extinction due to drainage/pollution of fen type
habitats |
|
Koeleria macrantha |
only a scattering of records |
|
Lathyraea clandestina |
has
spread out from the original introduction at Warley Place |
|
Lathyraea squamaria |
along Bourne Brook, Greensted Green/Marks Hall area |
|
Lathyrus hirsutus |
supposedly introduced to Hadleigh Downs, but possibly native
along the Thames Valley |
|
Lathyrus linifolius |
only a scattering of recent records |
|
Lathyrus sylvestris |
very rare, but locally plentiful as in Dagnam Park and on the N
W Chalk |
|
Legousia hybrida |
formerly common as a cornfield archeophyte on calcareous soils,
now declining rapidly |
|
Lepidium perfoliatum |
substantial colony established and conserved for many years on
Northey Island |
|
Leymus arenarius |
very rare, and in small quantity, Walton, Dovercourt-Lt Oakley
and Hullbridge |
|
Linum bienne |
scattered, but locally abundant on sea
walls and cliffs, formerly several sites inland |
|
Lithospermum officinale |
very rare, only recent records are from Hatfield Forest |
|
Lithospermum arvense |
drastic decline as cornfield weed, likely to become extinct over
the next 2-3 decades |
|
Luzula forsteri |
very rare, Hospital Wood (Hainault), Bedfords Park, Cranham,
Thundersley Glen |
|
Luzula sylvatica |
rare, woodland banks |
|
Lysimachia vulgaris |
drastic decline due to loss of marsh/fen sites |
|
Lythrum portula |
declining to due drying out of poached woodland rides and pond
margin drawdown |
|
Melampyrum pratense |
being lost from some woodland sites due to dense growth and
shading out |
|
Misopates orontium |
drastic decline, only two recent records |
|
Menyanthes trifoliata |
now
gone from Epping Forest, recently planted in a few ponds
elsewhere |
|
Monotropa hypopitys |
several populations on damp ledges above Grays Chalk Pit |
|
Mycelis muralis |
inexplicably rare in Essex, Epping Forest, South Weald, Hatfield
Broad Oak, Audley End and Upminster |
|
Myosotis discolor |
still widespread, but scattered and declining rapidly due to loss
of sandy grassland |
|
Myosotis ramosissima |
rare, declining rapidly |
|
Myosurus minimus |
sporadic in waterlogged arable fields by the coast |
|
Myriophyllum alterniflorum |
extinct |
|
Neottia nidus-avis |
drastic decline, only 2-3 recent records, but large popluation
in Grays Chalk Quarry |
|
Nepeta cataria |
apparently overlooked, sporadic around Grays and in the NW |
|
Oenanthe fistulosa |
drastic decline, only a handful of recent records |
|
Oenanthe
fluviatilis
(Bab.) Coleman |
very rare, declining,
formerly on Nationally Scarce list but demoted |
|
|
Ophioglossum vulgatum |
suffering from drought in recent years and loss of permanent
grassland but still widespread |
|
Ophyrs insectifera |
extinct, the only recent site destroyed by installation of new
bridleway at Peppers Green |
|
Orchis morio |
still a scattering of sites, very plentiful in a few NRs, vulnerable
to ploughing up of old pastures |
|
Oreopteris limbosperma |
one
recent record from Thorndon Park |
|
Origanum vulgare |
being lost on the chalky boulder clay verges due to
flailing/scrub encroachment |
|
Orobanche crenata |
recent neophyte, established in Cranham area since at least 1975,
well established seed bank in Cranham area, appears in thousands
on pea crops. |
|
Orobanche elatior |
declining, on verges and field margins on the chalk of the N W |
|
Osmunda regalis |
two
established (planted colonies) plus numerous sporadic casual
plants |
|
Parietaria officinalis |
established at Warley Place (only 2 sites in UK) |
|
Paris quadrifolia |
status uncertain, thought to be declining |
|
Pedicularis sylvatica
subsp. sylvatica |
now
confined to a single patch in Epping Forest, and occasional
appearances in Hainault Forest, lost recently from Danbury
Common and Danbury Backwarden |
|
Persicaria bistorta |
drastic decline due to ploughing of damp grassland, current
status uncertain, two sites only confirmed recently |
|
Petasites hybridus |
plentiful locally, but suffering from river corridor clearance |
|
Phleum arenarium |
declining, Mersea, Colne Point- St Osyth, Dovercourt, Shoebury |
|
Pimpinella major |
confined to the chalk of the NW, with outlier at Blackmore |
|
Platanthera bifolia |
extinct, formerly in several places including Epping Forest |
|
Platanthera chlorantha |
drastic decline due to lack of coppicing, resurvey needed |
|
Poa bulbosa |
rare but overlooked, short turf areas Grays, Shoebury, St Osyth |
|
Poa compressa |
now
very rare and sporadic on cracked concrete aprons and a few old
walls |
|
Polygala serpyllifolia |
drastic decline due to loss of permanent grazed grassland |
|
Polygala vulgaris |
drastic decline due to loss of permanent grazed grassland |
|
Polypodium vulgare
s.s |
virtually confined to old walls, decreasing rapidly with loss of
wall sites/drought |
|
Polystichum aculeatum |
drastic decline due to hedgerow clearance and woodland neglect |
|
Polystichum setiferum |
still widespread, but thinly scattered and declining rapidly |
|
Populus nigra
var. betulifolia |
about 207 veterans, several being lost each year |
|
Potamogeton alpinus |
extinct, due to sewage pollution |
|
Potamogeton berchtoldii |
rare, sporadic, declining due to loss of small clean ponds |
|
Potamogeton lucens |
drastic decline due to increasing motor-boat traffic on the main
rivers and canals |
|
Potamogeton obtusifolius |
only one recent record, Whipps Cross pond |
|
Potamogeton perfoliatus |
drastic decline due to increasing motor-boat traffic on the main
rivers and canals |
|
Potamogeton polygonifolius |
several sites in Epping Forest, but sporadic, pond on Tiptree
Heath, pond in Dagnam Park |
|
Potamogeton pusillus |
declining due to loss of clean ponds and lakes |
|
Potentilla anglica |
drastic decline due to loss of acid grasslands and hybridization |
|
Potentilla palustris |
confined to Cuckoo Pits, Epping Forest, introduced originally |
|
Prunella laciniata |
extinct |
|
Radiola linoides |
single extant site, Tiptree Heath |
|
Ranunculus circinatus |
scarce, ponds and rivers, declining |
|
Ranunculus fluitans |
only now found in the Cam, lost recently from the Stort due to
boat pollution |
|
Ranunculus hederaceus |
sporadic in marshy flushes, handful of records |
|
Ranunculus penicillatus
subsp. pseudofluitans |
only 6 recent records, drastic decline due to river pollution |
|
Rhinanthus minor |
now
virtually extinct on road verges, still in a few pastures where it is
often introduced |
|
Ribes nigrum |
thought to be native in Alder carr by R. Brain at Braintree,
otherwise garden escapes |
|
Rorippa austriaca |
3
sites in Chigwell/Loughton area, one old record from Abberton Reservoir |
|
Rorippa amphibia |
rare, scattered records, except along the Roding and Lee where
it is plentiful |
|
Rosa micrantha |
very local, scattering of records, not seen in Vc18 recently |
|
Rosa scherardii |
a few records from the north west and one
from Stone Point |
|
Rumex hydrolapathum |
declining rapidly, ponds river banks and brackish dykes |
|
Rumex pulcher |
scattered records, overlooked short grassland |
|
Ruppia cirrhosa |
very rare, in a few coastal borrow-dykes |
|
Sagina maritima |
very rare, coastal sands 2-3 records only |
|
Sagina nodosa |
extinct |
|
Salix aurita |
very rare, being hybridised out of existence, Epping Forest,
Tiptree Heath |
|
Salix repens |
rare, declining due to loss of open heath, present in Grays
Chalk Pit |
|
Salix pentandra |
very rare, not recorded recently, needs reasssessing |
|
Salix purpurea |
only a few scattered sites, doubtfully native, all apparently
male |
|
Salvia verbenaca |
very local, declining rapidly due to flailing during flowering
season |
|
Samolus valerandi |
3-4
sites near the coast, and Walthamstow Marshes |
|
Saxifraga granulata |
drastic decline due to loss of permanent grassland |
|
Saxifraga tridactylites |
fluctuating in abundance, mainly on walls, handful of sites |
|
Scabiosa columbaria |
very
rare, on N W Chalk, two sites (introduced?) Grays |
|
Scirpus sylvaticus |
only a handful of sites, declining due to drainage/scrubbing of
woodland flushes |
|
Scutellaria minor |
very rare, only seen recently at Galleywood Common, the Backwarden Danbury
and Pheasanthouse Wood Bog. |
|
Senecio aquaticus |
very rare, declining, only recent records from Stort valley, Dagenham Chase
and Curtismill Green |
|
Silaum silaus |
declining rapidly due to loss of old grassland, mowing in
June-July eliminates it |
|
Solidago virgaurea |
inexplicably rare in Essex, Little Baddow Heath, Mill Green
Common, Starvelarks Wood and Shenfield Common. |
|
Sparganium emersum |
declining due to river dredging, pollution, drawdown |
|
Spartina alterniflora |
introduced to the Blackwater estuary, persisting |
|
Spiranthes spiralis |
some decline, churchyards and private lawns |
|
Spirodela polyrhiza |
rapid decline over the last five years, spreads vegetatively
only |
|
Stachys arvensis |
scattering of sporadic records as arable weed |
|
Stachys officinalis |
drastic decline, likely to be on the verge of extinction within
the next few decades |
|
Stellaria neglecta |
very rare, only 2-3 records |
|
Stellaria pallida |
rare, coastal and salted verges, but probably overlooked as flowers so early |
|
Succisa pratensis |
drastic decline due to loss of damp permanent grassland, and
late mowing |
|
Thalictrum flavum |
declining through loss of fen sites, status needs reassessing |
|
Thalictrum minus subsp. minus |
classic site on verge and field margins, Strethall Field, garden
escape elsewhere |
|
Thalaspi alliaceum |
one
well established site at Beeleigh, one recent record on A127 road
verge |
|
Thymus polytrichum subsp. britannicus |
drastic decline, only handful of sites, needs reassessing |
|
Thymus pulegioides |
only two recent records |
|
Trifolium resupinatum |
two
recent casual records |
|
Trifolium scabrum |
single site |
|
Trifolium subterraneum |
declining, only a scattering of sites, mainly coastal |
|
Triglochin palustre |
on
verge of extinction, only recent record Hatfield Forest |
|
Utricularia australis |
in
several ponds on Epping Forest, spreading, one recent record for
garden pond at Wimbish |
|
Utricularia vulgaris |
unconfirmed record from Rainham Marshes (Grazing Marshes Survey) |
|
Vaccinium mytillus |
single record from Sunshine Plain Epping Forest, not seen
recently |
|
Valeriana dioica |
drastic decline, only two recent records |
|
Valeriana officinalis |
declining due to loss of marshland sites |
|
Valerianella locusta |
now
only casual on waste ground and gravel pits |
|
Verbena officinalis |
scattered sites, many along canals |
|
Veronica scutellata |
always very rare, only 3 recent records (21 monad records in
total) |
|
Vicia lathyroides |
drastic decline, only a handful of extant sites |
|
Viola canina |
declining due to loss of acid grassland |
|
Viola palustris |
single site, Epping Forest, not seen for at least five years |
|
Viscum album |
scattered sites, apparently increasing rapidly, possibly due to
increased rainfall less thus less water stress or a decline in
air pollution |
|
Wahlenbergia hederifolia |
extinct, formerly in several places in Epping Forest |