Site of Special Scientific Interest | |
Cleeve Common panorama
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Area of Search | Gloucestershire |
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Grid reference | SO990260 |
Coordinates | 51°55′59″N 2°00′55″W / 51.93296°N 2.015225°WCoordinates: 51°55′59″N 2°00′55″W / 51.93296°N 2.015225°W |
Interest | Biological/Geological |
Area | 455 hectare |
Notification | 1974 |
Natural England website |
Cleeve Common (grid reference SO990260) is a 455-hectare (1,120-acre) biological and geological Site of Special Scientific Interest in Gloucestershire, notified in 1974. It is looked after by a small charity called Cleeve Common Board of Conservators.
It lies in the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and is on Cleeve Hill. There is a golf course on the site and part of the site is registered as a common. The site is on Jurassic limestones on the top of the Cotswold scarp. It is north-east of Cheltenham. It is a large site and is important for its biology and geology.
There are several types of grassland within the site and their origination is dependent upon aspect, soil, grazing intensity and how areas of the common have been managed. The site supports several species of rare orchid such as the bee orchid, the frog orchid and the musk orchid. Spoil and scree from disused quarries provide conditions for plants which grow in more open habitats.
The site supports a wide range of invertebrates. These include butterflies such as the dark green fritillary, grayling and marsh fritillary. The rare snail Abide secale is recorded.