Plants
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Yellow Marsh Saxifrage
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Yellow Marsh Saxifrage (Saxifraga
hirculus)
Yellow Marsh Saxifrage is a plant that occurs in base-rich
flushes in blanket bogs. It is a weak stemmed plant with small
leaves and flowering shoots about 15 to 20 cm tall. There is
usually a single terminal large yellow flower, but up to three
flowers can occur. Yellow Marsh Saxifrage is threatened and
declining throughout much of Europe and in the UK it is now
restricted to about 20 localities in Scotland, northern England
and Northern Ireland. It also occurs at several locations in
north western counties of the Republic of Ireland. In Northern
Ireland, a prominent botanist called Praegar, first discovered
Yellow Marsh Saxifrage at three locations on the Garron Plateau
in County Antrim in 1920. Recent surveys have only found the
plant at one remaining flush in this site.
In Northern Ireland the Yellow Marsh Saxifrage is specially
protected under Schedule
8 of the Wildlife Order. It is also one of the few plants
in the Irish flora that is listed in Annex
II of the EU Habitats Directive for conservation action
because of the European importance of the UK populations. It
is also listed in Appendix
I of the Bern Convention. Because the plant is rare and
declining, it has been identified as a Priority Species for
conservation in the UK and in Northern Ireland. A UK Species
Action Plan has been produced for Yellow Marsh Saxifrage to
ensure the future protection and conservation of this special
plant throughout the UK.
Click here to view a distribution map of the Yellow Marsh
Saxifrage in Northern Ireland.