Round-leaved Bryum: Credit Joan McNaughton
Round-leaved Bryum: Credit Joan McNaughton

Extremely rare moss rediscovered near Edinburgh

An extremely rare moss has been rediscovered near Edinburgh, having not been found anywhere else in the UK since 1987.

Round-leaved bryum has been found at Threipmuir Reservoir near Balerno, Edinburgh, thanks to a collaboration between NatureScot and Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh.

Scientists have been rewarded after a 13-year wait to see one of Scotland’s rarest mosses, which prefers to live in areas where other species simply cannot. 

Aside from this Site of Special Scientific Interest, where it was last found 13 years ago, there has not been a confirmed identification anywhere else in the UK since 1987. 

The round-leaved bryum lives in the mud by reservoirs and lochans when the water levels are temporarily low, a habitat that only appears occasionally. 

The reservoir is a place where experts hoped to find it again, but only if the conditions were right.

The search for broad-leaved bryum with NatureScot’s Kat O’Brien and RGBE’s David Chamberlain.

Although tiny, the moss’s ability to survive in this type of extreme habitat means it has next to no competition from other plants. 

However, the human stabilisation of water levels and water pollution in Scotland mean that it and some other specialist species are under threat. S

Since 2010, the Threipmuir had been artificially stabilised, thus removing the round-leaved bryum’s preferred habitat conditions.

Scotland has over 900 species of moss, 40 of which are listed as GB Critically Endangered and Internationally Important. 

They make up the rich tapestry of Scotland’s biodiversity but are often underappreciated. 

Round-leaved bryum has been found by NatureScot’s Kat O’Brien, and identified by RBGE’s David Chamberlain at Threipmuir Reservoir

‘This incredible re-discovery of such a rare and endangered moss in Scotland shows us that there is a whole world of biodiversity that we can only see and appreciate when we take the time to create the best conditions and work to protect nature,’ Kat said. 

‘Despite a number of dedicated bryologists in the UK looking for it, no one has found any round-leaved bryum in decades other than at this site, leading to its classification as a GB Critically Endangered. 

‘It is likely that this moss is losing sites faster than it is gaining new ones, and is declining on a European scale. The unique habitat it needs only occasionally appears, and it’s a good sign that the conservation work in the area is helping biodiversity.’

Bryologist at Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, Dr Neil Bell, added: ‘Round-leaved bryum is one of our most threatened mosses, and this find confirms its continued presence at what is now its only site in the UK. 

‘Because it is specifically adapted to the temporary habitat that emerges when water levels are very low, rapidly completing its life cycle and then surviving in a dormant state in the mud for many years, the increasing artificial stabilisation of lakes and reservoirs is rapidly pushing it towards extinction in Britain.’

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