Black Down and Sampford Commons explained

Black Down and Sampford Commons
Aos:Somerset and Devon
Interest:Biological
Coordinates:50.9376°N -3.2566°W
Displaymap:Somerset
Area:155.2ha
Enref:1003750

Black Down and Sampford Commons[1] is a 155.2ha biological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Devon and Somerset, notified in 1952.[2] The Little Breach reserve, which forms part of the SSSI is an area of heathy grassland on Greensand, with some blackthorn and birch, noted for its butterflies and moths.[3]

Blackdown and Sampford Commons have the finest and most extensive surviving examples of the heathland, carr woodland and marshy grassland habitats that have developed on the acidic soils overlying the Greensand and Keuper Marls of the Blackdown Hills. The heathland supports a typical invertebrate fauna, including a wide variety of butterfly species, and with spiders notably abundant. The site is regionally important for birds which favour heathland habitats.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Black Down Common is so spelt by the Ordnance Survey, but the SSSI citation spells it Blackdown Common.
  2. Web site: Blackdown and Sampford Commons . English Nature . 2006-08-12.
  3. Web site: Little Breach, Blackdown Hills . Butterfly conservation . 2006-08-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060927211547/http://www.butterfly-conservation.org/reserves/little_breach/index.html . 2006-09-27 .