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Science
THE LIVING WORLD
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PROGRAMME INFO
Sunday 06:35-07:00
The Living World听is a gentle weekend natural history programme, presented by Lionel Kelleway, which aims to broadcast the best, most intimate encounters with British wildlife.
nhuradio@bbc.co.uk
LISTEN AGAINListen听25min
Listen to听25听March
PRESENTER
LIONEL KELLEWAY
Lionel Kelleway
PROGRAMME DETAILS
Sunday听25听March听2007
Lionel Kelleway & Phil Gates
Lionel working a centrifuge, supervised by Phil Gates

Mosses听and liverworts are not only some of the oldest and most fascinating plants on our planet, but they also provide refuge for some of the most bizarre creatures alive.听 Lionel Kelleway听joins botanist Phil Gates and his open air laboratory for a journey into the miniature world of Slitt Wood in Weardale.

Slitt Wood is a long, narrow, steep-sided SSSI wood (bird's nest orchid grows there) on either side of Middlehope Burn.听 Wet and damp, it鈥檚 an ideal habitat for mosses and liverworts.

Liverworts were the first plants to colonise the land and are as old as some of the rocks hereabouts, unequalled in terms of pure durability.听 They have survived five major mass extinction events, were trampled underfoot by dinosaurs and still thrive as they have always done, clinging to mud and bare rock. The thalloid liverworts are so called because they look like lobes of green liver and, according to the Medieval Doctrine of Signatures, this was a sign that they were put on earth for curing liver diseases.

Carpeting the stone walls of the wood are huge numbers of mosses: velvety coverings of cypress-leaves feather moss with spore capsules, golden woolly mats of Camptothecium sericeum听听 and hemispherical cushions of Grimmia pulvinata听 to name but a few.

Shrink down to the size of a moss, and you find yourself in a miniature rainforest.听 Phil Gates sets up an impromptu open鈥揳ir lab to explore the creatures which inhabit this forest.听 Using a hand-cranked centrifuge, he and Lionel give the foliage mini-beasts the fairground ride of their lives, concentrating them into a small volume of water which they examine under a miniature field microscope.听 Peering though the eye-piece, they watch water bears (strange eight-legged, bear-like animals with claws and sharp teeth) clambering about the debris; rotifers, which with their wheel organs working, create the most amazing vortices dragging food into their gullet and dozens of nematode worms moving through the film of water. 听It鈥檚 a fascinating microscopic world!

So if you thought mosses and liverworts were just boring green stuff with long, unpronounceable Latin names, prepare to听think again!
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