Ecological summary

Burial grounds are fantastic places for biodiversity, often containing species rich grassland which was once widespread in the UK. The walls and monuments create habitat for amphibians, reptiles, small mammals and invertebrates as well as ferns, mosses and liverworts. Of the 2,000 lichen species in the UK, 700 are found in churchyards with a third of these rarely found elsewhere. Check for thrushes feeding on yew berries and swifts and bats under the eaves.

Caring for God's Acre is a national charity dedicated to supporting those managing burial grounds for conservation and heritage purposes. More information on the support offered can be found on their website here: https://www.caringforgodsacre.org.uk. To view the occurrence records in this burial ground click on the View records button underneath the map.

Ancient & Veteran Trees

The UK holds a globally important population of veteran and ancient yew trees of which three-quarters are found in the churchyards of England and Wales. There are about 800 of these ancient and veteran yews, aged from 500 to several 1,000 years old, with no known upper age limit. Burial grounds may contain veteran trees of other species.

Burial grounds may also contain veteran trees of other species, acting as hosts to a wealth of associated plants, animals, lichen and fungi.

Bats and Swifts

Bats – Bats use both the buildings and also the mature and veteran trees within burial grounds to roost, breed and overwinter. These places are relatively unchanging and so populations may have built up over centuries. In addition, bats may forage and feed over the grassland and other vegetation, taking advantage of the wide variety of insect species to be found.

Swifts – The eaves, roofs, towers and steeples of historic churches and chapels, combined with the space around them for accessing nooks and crannies make burial grounds excellent for nesting swifts. These buildings are relatively unchanging and so populations may have built up over centuries. Nests are hard to find and so surveying is crucial for good management.

[counting] species

This map contains both point- and grid-based occurrences at different resolutions

Datasets

datasets have provided data to the NBN Atlas Beautiful Burial Grounds for this place.

Browse the list of datasets and find organisations you can join if you are interested in participating in a survey for this place.

Other Heritage Information

Group Species

[counting] species

This map contains both point- and grid-based occurrences at different resolutions

Showing 1 - 50 of 193 results
Taxa No. of records Most recent record
Achillea millefolium (Yarrow) 2 2023
Aegithalos caudatus (Long-tailed Tit) 5 2022
Aegopodium podagraria (Ground-elder) 1 2023
Aethusa cynapium (Fool's Parsley) 1 2023
Agaricus arvensis (Horse Mushroom) 1 2023
Aglais io (Peacock) 8 2024
Aglais urticae (Small Tortoiseshell) 4 2021
Agrostis capillaris (Common Bent) 1 2023
Alliaria petiolata (Garlic Mustard) 4 2020
Allium ursinum (Ramsons) 4 2024
Alopecurus pratensis (Meadow Foxtail) 2 2023
Anas platyrhynchos (Mallard) 1 2024
Andrena fulva (Tawny Mining Bee) 10 2024
Anthocharis cardamines (Orange-tip) 2 2020
Anthophora plumipes (Hairy-footed Flower Bee) 4 2024
Anthriscus sylvestris (Cow Parsley) 5 2024
Aphantopus hyperantus (Ringlet) 1 2021
Apis mellifera (Western Honey Bee) 12 2024
Armillaria mellea (Honey Fungus) 3 2021
Asplenium ruta-muraria (Wall-rue) 5 2023
Asplenium trichomanes (Maidenhair Spleenwort) 5 2023
Bellis perennis (Daisy) 1 2019
Bjerkandera adusta (Smoky Bracket) 2 2020
Bombus hortorum (Small Garden Bumblebee) 2 2020
Bombus hypnorum (Tree Bumblebee) 2 2024
Bombus lapidarius (Red-tailed Bumblebee) 4 2020
Bombus pascuorum (Common Carder Bee) 4 2020
Bombus terrestris (Buff-tailed Bumblebee) 2 2018
Bombylius major (Dark-edged Bee-fly) 8 2024
Campanula rotundifolia (Harebell) 1 2023
Campanula trachelium (Nettle-leaved Bellflower) 1 2023
Carduelis carduelis (Goldfinch) 9 2023
Celastrina argiolus (Holly Blue) 5 2023
Ceterach officinarum (Rustyback) 1 2023
Chelidonium majus (Greater Celandine) 3 2024
Chenopodium album (Fat-hen) 1 2023
Chloris chloris (Greenfinch) 2 2022
Chlorophyllum brunneum (Brown Parasol) 1 2023
Chlorophyllum rhacodes (Shaggy Parasol) 2 2023
Clitocybe nebularis (Clouded Funnel) 1 2023
Clitopilus prunulus (The Miller) 1 2022
Coccinella septempunctata (7-spot Ladybird) 3 2024
Coloeus monedula (Jackdaw) 3 2023
Columba palumbus (Woodpigeon) 1 2021
Coprinellus micaceus (Glistening Inkcap) 2 2024
Coprinus comatus (Shaggy Inkcap) 6 2023
Coreus marginatus (Dock Bug) 1 2024
Corizus hyoscyami 4 2024
Corvus corax (Raven) 3 2020
Crepis capillaris (Smooth Hawk's-beard) 1 2023

Charts showing breakdown of occurrence records ([counting] records)

Data sets Licence Records