Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Hieracium naviense

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Asteraceae

Rank
  
Species

Order
  
Asterales

Genus
  
Hieracium

Hieracium naviense

Similar
  
Hieracium radyrense, Hieracium snowdoniense, Hieracium amplexicaule, Hieracium schmidtii, Hieracium alpinum

Hieracium naviense is a very rare species of hawkweed which has been given the common name of Derby Hawkweed.

It is a native perennial plant of limestone cliffs, first discovered in Derbyshire, England at the Winnats Pass (SK1382) by J.N. Mills in 1966, and described by him as a new species in 1968. According to the Flora of Derbyshire, it has been refound there on a number of occasions since, up until 2013, including in 1981 by UK hawkweed expert, P.D. Sell, who declared it "a good species".

Like so many other apomictic species of Hieracium, it has an extremely localised distribution and requires specialist knowledge to recognise it. Apart from the two limestone cliffs found within a single 1km square in the Derbyshire Peak District, it has never been recorded anywhere else in Britain, or indeed the world. The only other vascular plant endemic to Derbyshire which is found nowhere else, is Rubus durescens.

Conservation Status

This endemic plant species was previously regarded as being Nationally Rare (NR) and Vulnerable (VR) in the national UK conservation list but its status was upgraded to the IUCN-defined conservation category of Critically Endangered (CR) in England's Vascular Plant Red List, first published in 2014.

References

Hieracium naviense Wikipedia