Site Name, designation and description (if available)
Distance from Proposed Cable Corridor and Converter Station (m)
standing water fed by springs and also the occasional Quercus robur (Pedunculate Oak) and Alnus glutinosa (Alder). Spring pond is overgrown with little open water but the ground is not water-logged with the springs flowing as streams. There is a diverse age structure with regrowth of Alnus glutinosa (Alder) and Carpinus betulus (Hornbeam) of considerable age. The flora includes Hyacinthoides non-scripta (Bluebell) on the slope rising to the railway line and some plants normally indicative of ancient woodland for example Melica uniflora (Wood Melick), Sanicula europaea (Sanicle) and Adoxa moschatellina (Moschatel). Wetland species occur in the boggy flushes.
Woodbridge Old Cemetery CWS comprises mature trees and unimproved dry grassland over nutrient poor soil. The higher ground and slopes of the cemetery support parched grassland with characteristic species such as Agrostis capillaris (Common Bent), Vulpia bromoides (Squirreltail Fescue), Trifolium glomeratum (Clustered Clover), Galium verum (Lady’s Bedstraw), Rumex acetosa (Common Sorrel) and Salvia verbenaca (Wild Clary). In places, where conditions are really parched vegetation is comprised almost entirely of lichens and bryophytes. At the base of the slopes where conditions are more mesotrophic species such as Leucanthemum vulgare (Oxeye Daisy) and Rumex acetosa (Common Sorrel) are found. Saxifraga granulata (Meadow Saxifrage) (considered occasional in Suffolk) occurs in clusters throughout the cemetery. The trees on the site are important for birds, bats and invertebrates, species of note include Lucanus cervus (Stag Beetle).
Blunt's Wood Meadow CWS is a horse-grazed meadow with a diverse plant community. Species of note include Pimpinella major (Greater Burnet- saxifrage), of which there are only three other records in east Suffolk. The meadow lies adjacent to Blunt's Wood which has also been designated as a County Wildlife Site.
RNR 92 CWS is a Roadside Nature Reserve that supports Trifolium ochroleucon (Sulphur Clover) and Orchis anthropophora (Man Orchid).
Culpho Wood ASNW, PAW & CWS was clear-felled in the early 1940s and replanted by the Forestry Commission with mainly Quercus sp. (Oak) and some conifers.
Hogfield Grove CWS comprises a small woodland which is thought to be a fragment of ancient woodland. Situated in the parish of Little Blakenham, it is bordered in the south by a chalk pit which is designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. The dominant species are Fraxinus excelsior (Ash), Acer campestre (Field Maple) and Corylus avellana (Hazel) coppice in the scrub layer with Quercus sp. (Oak) and Ash standards forming the tree canopy. A notable feature of the wood is a few overmature Prunus sp. (Cherry) trees. Mercurialis perennis (Dog’s Mercury) dominates about two thirds of the flora of the wood; Hyacinthoides non-scripta (Bluebell) interspersed with patches of Rubus fruticosus agg. (Bramble) cover the rest of the area. A number of uncommon plants, for example Iris foetidissima (Stinking Iris) and Orchis mascula (Early-purple Orchid) have been recorded in a few places in the wood.
851
854
881 903 937
Pogson's Farm Meadow CWS comprises of herb-rich grazed meadows with 859
East Anglia Offshore Wind Limited
Background Data Search Report 854188 (Rev 01)
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