Irish heritage plant group awarded National Plant Collection status
Over 1,000 types of plant held in 75 different locations in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland have been recognised by leading UK horticultural charity
A group of over 1,000 plants that have either been bred, collected or named after Irish horticulturalists and/or historic plant explorers has been awarded National Plant Collection status by UK horticultural conservation charity Plant Heritage.
Found in 75 different locations in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, the newly accredited Irish Heritage Plants National Plant Collection celebrates Ireland’s rich horticultural heritage, and aims to conserve all garden plants with an Irish connection.
Every plant has a link to Ireland, and must fall within one of the following categories:
- Found or introduced by an Irish plantsman and/or collector, such as Augustine Henry
- Bred or found in an Irish nursery, such as Ravensberg Nursery in Co. Offaly
- Bred or found in an Irish garden, like the National Trust’s Rowallane Garden in Northern Ireland
- Named for or by an Irish gardener
- Grown – or perhaps first flowered – in Ireland
Some plants within the collection are very common, like the Irish yew – a plant known to almost every gardener – whereas others, like Iris ‘Kilbroney Marble’ (pictured below) are exceedingly scarce, with only one listed supplier. Many others are now only found in members’ gardens, and sometimes are the only one recorded of their kind.
The rare Iris unguicularis ‘Kilbroney Marble’. Credit Paddy Tobin/Irish Garden Plant Society [High res, and others, available]
Vicki Cooke, Conservation Manager at Plant Heritage says: “National Plant Collections are living libraries, and are the key to preventing plants that have fallen out of fashion and are no longer commercially available from being lost forever. The Irish Garden Plant Society’s huge collection is a phenomenal celebration of Irish horticultural history and demonstrates how important it is that our garden plants are researched, hunted down and looked after by passionate and knowledgeable Collection Holders.”
Stephen Butler, Heritage Plants Coordinator at the Irish Garden Plant Society says: “One of the plants in our collection, Primula ‘Julius Caesar’ was presumed extinct, but excitingly it was rediscovered in the late 1990s by one of our members. Now, I’m delighted to say it has been spread across several gardens, and while it’s still not commercially available, it is no longer at risk of becoming extinct, which is fantastic.”
The Irish Garden Plant Society manages this new collection, which is 40 years in the making. The collection is based on work by Dr Charles Nelson, a horticultural taxonomist who helped form the society in 1981. The Irish Garden Plant Society published A Heritage of Beauty – The Garden Plants of Ireland after 20 years of research by Nelson in 2000. This encyclopaedia lists over 5,300 plants with an Irish connection, and while many are no longer in existence, Irish Garden Plant Society members have helped keep many alive over the past 40 years, which now form this newly accredited National Plant Collection.
Since A Heritage of Beauty – The Garden Plants of Ireland was published, over 100 cultivars with an Irish connection have been named and added to a database maintained by the Irish Garden Plant Society. This list comprises thousands of plants linked to Ireland, with all records maintained so that if any details about any plant (such as origin or date of introduction) is required, it is all in one place.
Dr Mary Forrest, Chair of the Irish Garden Plant Society adds: “We have been committed to conserving Ireland’s horticultural heritage for over 40 years, and the society is very honoured to have now been awarded National Plant Collection status by Plant Heritage. It is recognition of the value of the work of the society, the original research by Dr Charles Nelson and the past – and ongoing – hard work by all of our society members.”
Plant Heritage’s 695 National Plant Collections are created, and curated, by individuals or organisations (including Dublin Zoo which is home to the National Plant Collection of Libertia) all over the UK and the Republic of Ireland who are passionate about protecting the diversity of plants. These collections comprise a variety of plant groups from conifers to cacti, come in all sizes from miniature orchids to mighty oaks, and contain a staggering 95,000+ garden plants.
To find out more about Plant Heritage, its National Plant Collections or for information about how to become a Collection Holder, Plant Guardian or member, visit www.plantheritage.org.uk
To find out more about the Irish Garden Plant Society visit www.irishgardenplantsociety.com
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Notes to editors
For high-res images, interview requests or to receive Plant Heritage’s press pack, please contact Adela Cragg on:
T: 07532 685 614
Available for interview:
- Vicki Cooke, Conservation Manager, Plant Heritage
- Gill Groombridge, Business Manager, Plant Heritage
- Stephen Butler, Heritage Plants Coordinator, Irish Garden Plant Society
- Dr Mary Forrest, Chair, Irish Garden Plant Society
About Plant Heritage
- Founded in 1978, Plant Heritage is the world’s leading cultivated plant conservation charity, for plants that have been collected, bred or grown in UK gardens.
- Plant Heritage aims to conserve and safeguard the UK’s horticultural heritage and diversity of garden plants by keeping living examples of rare plants in the National Plant Collections® scheme, or with Plant Guardians® (who grow and nurture one or more rare and unusual plants in their own garden or house)
- Plant Heritage’s National Plant Collections® are living plant libraries, showcasing the amazing diversity of our nation’s cultivated plants. They are created, and curated, by individuals or organisations who are passionate about protecting the diversity of our rich flora
- Plant Heritage aims to: increase the variety of garden plants available across the UK, educate and raise awareness about the plight of rare garden plants via the annual Plant Exchange™, plant sales and propagation events; ensure rare plants and collections are supported for generations to enjoy today and tomorrow; and identify which plant cultivars are at risk of disappearing through their Threatened Plants Programme™, so plans can be made to protect them
- Plant Heritage relies on donations and gifts to encourage, support and accredit National Plant Collections. To donate, become a member or to find out how you can help, visit plantheritage.org.uk. Every donation is greatly appreciated.
- Plant Heritage can also be found on Instagram, Facebook & Twitter
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