2021
2022
2023
2024
November 26, 2020
Managed by Wytham Woods
Since 2020
In England, GB
WWS111
This chronolog combines 83 photos from 45 contributors. Learn more
This area is a mixture of mainly ash and sycamore which was once part of Wytham Common, grazed by animals (cattle, sheep, ponies etc) owned by the local villagers. It was brought into the Woods in the mid-19th century. An old ash nearby was recently cut up because it had partly fallen across the track and had at least 135 annual rings, so must have been one of the early colonising trees.
Wytham Woods is an ancient semi-natural woodland, which has been owned and maintained by the University of Oxford since 1942. Its 1000 acres are a designated Site of Special Scientific Interest and are one of the most researched pieces of woodland in the world, exceptionally rich in flora and fauna, with over 500 species of plants, a wealth of woodland habitats, and 800 species of butterflies and moths. The Woods can be divided into four main habitats.
The forested area is a simple three-way split between ancient semi-natural woodland, secondary woodland, and modern plantations. The fourth key habitat is the limestone grassland found at the top of the hill. Other smaller habitats include a valley-side mire and a series of ponds. The ancient woods date back to the last Ice Age, while the secondary woodland dates to the seventeenth century and the plantations to the 1950s and 1960s.
Through our Chronolog stations, we hope to gain greater insights into how climate change and other processes are changing phenology within the woods. Our post descriptions were provided by https://theoldmanofwytham.com/.
Coordinates: 51.776853 , -1.3288704
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