Other Plant Species
The following table sets out some links between common wildflower species, horses and biodiversity.
If you would like this information in a more accessible format, please contact planning@southdowns.gov.uk
Wildflower Species | Information | Soils | Examples of their biodiversity benefits |
Birdsfoot trefoil Lotus corniculatus |
Liked by horses. Anthelmintic (worm reducing properties). Important nutritious plant late on in the summer when grasses start to decline.
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All soil types. Nitrogen fixing species, can help to improve soil fertility. |
Excellent species for pollinators. Food plant for the Common Blue and Dingy Skipper. |
Black medick (also called yellow trefoil) Medicago lupulina |
Nutritious for horses.
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All soil types. Adds organic matter, can suppress other weeds due to is creeping nature and fixes nitrogen using a deep tap-root, so supports soil fertility |
Pollinated by bees of all varieties as well as moths and butterflies. It is the food plant of the Common Blue. |
Ribwort plantain Plantago lanceolata | Common in grasslands, some horses will seek it out. Relatively low yielding but has deep roots and good vitamin and mineral content (especially copper, calcium and selenium). | All soil types. | Butterflies, moths and hoverflies particularly feed on these flowers. Sheep love it too and its seeds are readily eaten by goldfinches. |
Thistles Cirsium, Carduus, Carlina spp. |
Horses will eat the growing flower buds and wilted plants. Thistles are mineral rich. | All soil types. But are less successful in damp grasslands. | Linnets, and goldfinches each the seeds. Painted Lady and Peacock butterflies use it at various stages of their lifecycle. |
Yarrow Achillea millefolium
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Liked by horses. Deep rooting, pulls trace elements from deep within the soil, making them available to grazing animals. High in Vitamin A so good for young horses. |
All soil types. Low lying meadows where fertility is a bit higher. |
Hoverflies |
Self-heal Prunella vulgaris |
Has a creeping, mat-forming habit. |
All soil types.
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Bumblebees |
Knapweed Centaurea nigra |
Extensive roots make this an excellent drought tolerant species. |
All soil types.
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Common and a source of good quality nectar so favoured by butterflies, bees and beetles. Seeds are an important food source for birds. |
Lady’s bedstraw Galium verum |
Flowers smell of hay when dried. |
All soil types.
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Food plant of the broad-bordered bee hawkmoth |
Field Scabious Knautia arvensis |
A good source of nectar. |
All soil types. Prefers well-drained chalky to neutral soils.
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A great source of nectar and very long flowering period make this plant great for invertebrates. Seeds are liked by finches and linnets. |
Salad Burnett Sanguisorba minor |
Fairly deep-rooted and spreading so useful part of a mix of species in areas previously poached.
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Chalk, low fertility soils. | Bumblebees |
Wild Marjoram Origanum vulgare |
Can do well on thin, dry soils. | Chalk, low fertility soils. | Excellent source of nectar – food plant of the Large Blue butterfly. |
Wild Basil Cinopodium vulgare |
Found in dry places, edges of pasture along hedge lines. | Chalk to Acidic sandy soils but always low fertility. | Good for bees like other dead nettles, and flowers later on in the summer so a late source of food for insects. |
Musk Mallow Malva moschata |
Found largely along field margins, prefers dry soils. | Chalk, low fertility soils. | Many pollinating insects |
Small Scabious Scabiosa columbaria | Copes well in dry conditions. | Chalk, low fertility soils. | A favourite amongst bees and butterflies. flowers late on in the summer. |
Meadow Vetchling Lathyrus pratensis | Spreads through underground stems called rhizomes, so good to help break up compacted or poached ground. | Heavy soils, can be found in more fertile pastures. | |
Common Sorrel Rumex acetosa |
Heavy soils. | ||
Meadow Cranesbill Geranium pratense | Particularly likes chalky soils. | Bumble and honey bees. | |
Devil’s-bit Scabious Succisa pratensis |
Heavy soils, favours damp slightly acid grasslands. | Important food plant for the marsh fritillary butterfly. | |
Ox-eye daisy Leucanthemum vulgare | Low lying meadows where fertility is a bit higher. |