I have added a provisional list of seaweeds for the Hastings/Rye/Dungeness 
coast to my web pages.
 
 
https://asgrace4.wordpress.com/
 
Best wishes
 
Andrew Grace
 
From: vivien.ho...@aol.co.uk
To: adastra@lists.sxbrc.org.uk
Date: Fri, 15 Jan 2016 15:27:31 +0000
Subject: Re: [Adastra] To rattle or not to rattle

Thanks Dawn I was starting to think the Adastra Forum had died!  Bet 
wishesVivien From: Adastra [mailto:adastra-boun...@lists.sxbrc.org.uk] On 
Behalf Of dawn nelson
Sent: 15 January 2016 13:56
To: Adastra discussion group
Subject: Re: [Adastra] To rattle or not to rattle I think it probably a good 
idea  to avoid doing this on unimproved or semi-unimproved grasslands, except 
in the case of reintroductions. Best wishes Dawn  From: 
"vivien.ho...@aol.co.uk" <vivien.ho...@aol.co.uk>
To: Adastra discussion group <adastra@lists.sxbrc.org.uk> 
Sent: Thursday, 14 January 2016, 20:46
Subject: [Adastra] To rattle or not to rattle Hello Adastrans I have misgivings 
about the current popularity of introducing yellow rattle (and other British 
native plants) to existing grasslands where no historic records of such plants 
exist, am I worrying unnecessarily or is there cause for concern, what do you 
think? Should we perhaps restrict the introduction of yellow rattle and other 
plants to new or improved grasslands and avoid doing this on unimproved or 
semi-unimproved grasslands, except in the case of reintroductions? Are we in 
effect homogenising our countryside whereby the uniqueness of individual sites 
will be lost? It may become impossible to determine what the naturally 
occurring flora really was, does this matter? Can yellow rattle have a 
detrimental effect on existing vegetation? For instance, can it impact upon 
rare grasses? Are there any protocols, codes of conduct etc. that we should be 
following on this subject? I’d appreciate any advice, thanks,Vivien             
                          

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