The Daily Telegraph

Extremely rare Welsh flower grazed to near extinction blooms again in Snowdonia

- By Olivia Rudgard

A RARE Welsh flower eaten almost to extinction by grazing sheep has made a comeback in Snowdonia after conservati­onists removed the animals from the area.

The Snowdonia hawkweed, one of the rarest plants in the world, had been thought to be extinct for almost five decades. But in 2002 a team of botanists spotted the plant clinging to a cliff away from grazing sheep and began conservati­on efforts to revive it.

The perennial, also known as Hierachium snowdonien­se, has now doubled its numbers from three to six after two decades.

It can now be found on mountains near Bethesda in Snowdonia and at the National Botanic Garden of Wales in Carmarthen­shire.

Robbie Blackhall-miles, a consultant botanist, who is based in Snowdonia, said: “If you’re Joe Public, you’d [think] it’s just another dandelion. In 2002 we were down to three plants but by 2021, six have been seen.

“After the Second World War, sheep were left to roam the landscape and not regulated by shepherds as they had been historical­ly.

“And if you’re sheep, you’re not going to eat boring grass but nutritious flowers, so herbs like the Snowdonia hawkweed got eaten.”

The sunshine-yellow flowers were first identified in the 1880s and declared a species in the 1950s.

Before they were rediscover­ed they had last been recorded in 1953.

Conservati­onists have since removed sheep from the immediate vicinity and collected the plant’s seeds as an insurance policy.

Mr Blackhall-miles added: “It’s now safe where it is. It’s been brought into the National Botanic Garden of Wales for conservati­on and is being protected in the wild.

“It would be great to see them again in all seven sites where it used to grow but you’d have to control grazing for that to happen.”

Earlier this year the plant was also featured in Sherlock Holmes drama The Irregulars on Netflix, where it was credited with properties which brought a dead man back to life.

While this power was a fictional invention, it has traditiona­lly been used as a treatment for respirator­y and kidney problems.

 ??  ?? Botanists thought the Snowdonia Hawkweed had been extinct for decades
Botanists thought the Snowdonia Hawkweed had been extinct for decades

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