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Durham County Council Information Service
Finchale Priory

Little Wood Local Nature Reserve

About the Site

Little Wood is a small pocket of Magnesian Limestone grassland on the eastern edge of Quarrington Hill. This type of grassland is home to a rich and distinctive group of plants and insects, and is one of the UK’s rarest habitats. Such grassland has been fragmented due to agricultural intensification and quarrying activities.

Birds-foot Trefoil

Blue moor-grass is dominant throughout the grassland with quaking-grass, sheep’s fescue, crested hair-grass and meadow oat-grass. Glaucous sedge forms a significant part of the plant community.

dark red helleborine

A profusion of broad leaved herbs can be found, with common bird’s-foot-trefoil, hare bell, rockrose, fairy flax, burnet saxifrage, small scabious, cowslip, salad burnet and wild thyme all prominent. Burnet saxifrage is named from the Latin saxum, stone and frango, break. The name refers to the use of this plant in traditional medicine, to treat kidney and bladder stones. Less commonly occurring species include common milkwort, hairy violet, wild carrot and felwort. The scarce dark-red helleborine occurs on the site too, as does basil thyme, a plant generally found in the south of England.

Northen brown argus

The Northern brown argus butterfly, a species which occurs only on Magnesian Limestone grasslands of County Durham and Tyne and Wear, occurs on the site. This is a notable and declining butterfly, with a reported 35 % decrease in populations since 1983. Any site where this species occurs is therefore of significant nature conservation importance.

Little Wood

Map Of Littlewood

Location

Grid reference: NZ 340375

Facilities

None

Similar Sites

Cassop Vale National Nature Reserve

Hawthorn Dene
Thrislington National Nature Reserve

Enquiries

Durham County Council
Environment,
County Hall
Durham
DH1 5UQ
Tel: 0191 3833594