Carex elongata
Carex elongata fruits

Taxonomy

The name Carex elongata L., Elongated Sedge, is accepted by all authorities.

Distribution

C. elongata is widely but sparsely distributed throughout the British Isles. In Scarce Plants (Stewart, Pearman & Preston 1994) Dick David described how it had disappeared from canals and ponds in the Manchester area and showed a fairly dramatic decline. In the New Atlas (Preston, Pearman & Dines 2002) it is shown as slightly increasing. However, the maps do seem show a long-term decline that may well be continuing.

Status

It is considered a Nationally Scarce plant (Stewart, Pearman & Preston 1994) and is currently listed as ‘Least Concern’ (Cheffings & Farrell, 2005).

In Hampshire and Surrey, populations of this species have been boosted by apparently successful reintroductions (data from the TPDB).

Ecology

The ecology of C. elongata is perhaps its most interesting attribute. It is most typically a plant of W5 Alnus glutinosa woodland on scrubbed-over mires that are inundated by surface water. Jermy et al. (2007) say it also occurs in W2 Salix-Betula woodland and C.R. Hall (pers. comm.) considers that it grows in W6 Alnus glutinosa woodland in Hampshire. David (1994) describes how it often occurs on floating wood, and Mallabar (1998) takes this one step further, suggesting that seeds tend to germinate on rotting wood, due to some association that has not yet been defined. This might explain why David considered seeds to have low viability.

In the past, C. elongata was found on the rotting wooden piles of canals, but it appears to have completely gone from canals now as wood is no longer used in their construction.

C. elongata populations fluctuate enormously in abundance, being most successful in late- successional sites as they start to dry out. Hencott Pool in Shropshire was considered one of the best sites for it in the 1980s, with hundreds of plants, but it had almost gone from there twenty years later (Lockton & Whild 2003) as the pool dried out and the canopy closed.

Future work

More research into its highly specialised ecological niche would be worthwhile, including a more detailed examination of its vegetation communities.

A close watch should be kept on its distribution to find out whether it is in fact declining.

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Carex elongata (Dan Wrench)

References

Cheffings, C. & Farrell, L. eds. 2005. Species Status No. 7: The Vascular Plant Red Data List for Great Britain. Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Peterborough.

David, R.W. 1994. Carex elongata. In Scarce Plants (Stewart, Pearman & Preston).

Jermy, C., Simpson, D., Foley, M. & Porter, M. 2007. Sedges of the British Isles, 3rd ed. Botanical Society of the British Isles, London.

Lockton, A.J. & Whild, S.J. 2003. A botanical survey of Hencott Pool. Whild Associates report to English Nature, Shrewsbury.

Mallabar, J. 1998. Habitat status and niche requirements of Carex elongata L. in Britain. MSc dissertation, School of Biological Sciences, University of Birmingham.

Preston, C.D., Pearman, D.A. & Dines, T.D. 2002. New Atlas of the British & Irish Flora. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

Stewart, A., Pearman, D.A., & Preston, C.D. 1994. Scarce Plants in Britain. JNCC, Peterborough.

Send us your comments and Feedback

Neil Sanderson (21/1/2008): the Hurn Forest site might be quite unusual in a British context in being on deep peat (is it?). I have seen references on the internet to Carex elongata swamp being a major peat former in Polish fens but this does not sound typical of its British occurrences. The Hurn mires are very unusual hydrologically, at least in our area, and may have a limited similarity to other English C. elongata sites.

I am not meaning to challenge the epiphytic germination idea as a hypothesis, but would point out than in the one site I have seen the sedge, it is clearly a non-starter. The sedge dominates hectares of carr which is less than 50 years old, it did not get that way by germinating on fallen wood. As a habitat this is just appearing and is being utilised by Carex remota, and hence this species is able to survive within C. elongata dominated stands.