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Shetland's botanical stars are a few species of hawkweed and a chickweed that grow nowhere else but there are many different plant habitats providing dazzling displays of colour, ranging from marches and meadows to arctic-alpine tundra.

Heather
Because the islands are so isolated, so far north, so cold and so windy, there are only about 400 plant species. However, in ravines, on ungrazed islets and, above all, in the 'hanging gardens' of the cliffs there are still vivid relics of the far more luxuriant vegetation that clothed the islands thousands of years ago.
Plants adapted to extreme saltiness, dryness, high winds and lack of nutrients cling to shifting sands and shingle banks on the lower shores. They include Sea Rocket, Silverweed, Sea Sandwort, Sea Mayweed, Goosegrass and the extremely rare Oysterplant.
A little further inland, on the sandy links above the beaches, there's a striking display of summer flowers, dominated by Tufted Vetch, Bird's-Foot Trefoil and Yarrow. Other flowers include Daisy, Buttercup, Silverweed, Selfheal, Eyebright, Field and Autumn Gentian.

Shetland Sea Pink
Da Banks, or sea cliffs, have some of the lushest vegetation in the islands. Along the closely-grazed turf of the clifftops Sea Pink and the tiny blue flowers of Spring Squill are prominent from late May through to early July. On ungrazed sections they're joined by Sea Plantain, Buck's-Horn Plantain and, on the more sheltered cliffs, by Roseroot, Sea Campion, Red Campion, Scurvy Grass, Bird's-Foot Trefoil, Sheep's-Bit and Thyme. These species all flourish despite the poor soils, rapid drainage and exposure to violent winter winds and salt spray.
Roseroot copes by having very succulent leaves which they conserve fresh water, similar to cactus plant. Spring Squill, Sea Pink and Sea Plantain do the same, while Scots Lovage, another plant frequent on inaccessible cliffs, adapts to the short growing season in Shetland by maximising growth early in the year.
The profusion of plant life on the cliffs - in what amounts to a frigid, salt-lashed desert, lead one to wonder just how green the hills and valleys of Shetland must have been, before humans imported sheep and fire some 7,000 years ago.
In just a few places some stunted native trees have survived, such as the single Hazel at Catfirth in Nesting, the Rowans on loch islands in Northmavine and Shetland's last wild Crab-apples on a cliff face at Fora Ness in Delting. In recent years the Shetland Amenity Trust has sponsored schemes to restore at least some of Shetland's native trees and shrubs, helped by many enthusiastic local gardeners.
Blanket bog, a globally rare and threatened habitat, cloaks most of Shetland's hills. The peat is several metres thick in places, preserving thousands of annual layers of dead plants, including - 4,000-5,000 years down from the surface - the birch and Scots pine that grew on the lower slopes before prehistoric humans and their sheep destroyed the ancient woodland.
Shetland's peat formed partly because of the damp, cool, climate - which helps to exclude oxygen from the layers and thus retards rotting and recycling - and partly because for several thousand years after the last glaciation there appear to have been few if any grazing animals in the islands - allowing plants to grow unchecked.
Wet-loving plants dominate today's heavily-grazed moorland and include Cross-leaved Heath, Bog Asphodel, Cotton Grass and Deer Grass. Hidden amongst taller plants are small herbs such as the blue or lilac flowered Milkwort and the yellow Tormentil.
Bog Moss or Sphagnum can hold eight times its own weight in water and each clump contains a microscopic habitat with its own climate. Few plants can cope with the constant damp and lack of nutrients in peat. Some, such as Sundew and Butterwort, compensate by being carnivorous - trapping insects on their sticky leaves and then digesting them. Others, such as Lousewort, are semi-parasitic, tapping into the roots of other plants for food.
The damper areas also favour Heath Spotted Orchid. Its short flowering spike is made up of a number of small pinkish-lilac flowers, each with a 'lip' marked with darker dots and lines.
Drier heathland supports Bell Heather, a woody shrub showing clusters of purple bell-shaped flowers from July to August.

Endemic Edmonton's Chickweed
On Shetland's highest summit, Ronas Hill (1,475' / 450m) conditions can be as extreme as the top of Cairngorm. Vegetation is sparse and plants have adapted by growing low, creeping or forming hummocks on bare, exposed granite debris. About 15 Arctic-Alpine species grow on the hill, including Alpine Lady's Mantle and Moss Campion.
The eastern hills of Unst are not as high but, because of the peculiar geochemistry of the rocks on the Keen of Hamar National Nature Reserve, a similar tundra-like habitat of stony soils has developed. Here grow the only examples in the world of Edmondston's (Shetland) Mouse-ear, a beautiful little chickweed named after Unst's famous 19th century teenage botanist, Thomas Edmondston, killed accidentally in Peru while on an expedition in the steps of Charles Darwin.
Road verges are one of Shetland's floral surprises. They are usually ungrazed and support a wide variety of flowers absent from the pastures on the other side of the fence. Primrose, Devil's-Bit Scabious, Autumn Hawkbit and Red Campion are common, along with grasses. A walk along a winding Shetland side road in early summer is a botanist's delight.
Traditional crofting created botanically diverse habitats particularly valuable for wildlife. Hayfields (no longer common in Shetland) and carefully managed grazing encourage gentians and orchids.
Drier meadows support many grasses including Sweet Vernal Grass - which gives dried its special smell. Amongst the grasses, Meadow Buttercup, Yellow Rattle, Devil's-Bit Scabious and Autumn Hawkbit dominate, accompanied by Red and White Clover, Common Mouse Ear and Eyebright, another semi-parasitic plant which takes advantage of the root systems of its host.
Sedges, Marsh Cinquefoil, Ragged-Robin and Lady's Smock favour wet meadows while tall herbs such as Meadowsweet and Angelica do better in areas where there's little or no grazing. Burns and ditches glow with Marsh Marigold, Monkey Flower and Yellow Flag.
After several decades when large areas of agricultural land in Shetland were re-seeded, drained and given heavy applications of lime and fertiliser, many crofters and farmers are now involved in government-funded environmental improvement schemes to restore and improve traditional crofting habitats. There are special payments for cutting grass for silage later in the season, allowing nesting birds to fledge and wild flowers to set seed.
There are several excellent botanical guides to Shetland. The best field identification book is Shetland's Wild Flowers - a Photographic Guide by David Malcolm, while the most authoritative work is the encyclopaedic Flowering Plants and Ferns of the Shetland Islands by Walter Scott and Edward Palmer (both published by The Shetland Times Ltd).
Botany is an important ingredient in Shetland Wildlife's tours to Shetland, which often include a boat excursion from Lerwick or Mid Yell - a good way to see the cliff flora at close range. Visit Shetland can arrange these and other tours with specialist guides.
| Name | Shetland name | Flowering season |
|---|---|---|
| Tormentil | Eartbark | May - Sept |
| Sea Campion | Buggiflooer | May - Aug |
| Sea Pink | Banksflooer | May - July |
| Red Campion | Sweet William | May - Sept |
| Bird's-foot Trefoil | Kattikloo | May - Aug |
| Bog Asphodel | Limmerick | July - Aug |
| Bog Cotton | Lokkaminnie's Oo | May - June |
| Yellow Rattle | Dog's Pennies | June - Aug |
| Ragged-Robin | Raggy-Willie | June - Aug |
| Marsh Marigold | Blugga | Apr - June |
| Yellow Flag | Seggi-flooer | July - Aug |
| Oatgrass | Okrabung | June - Aug |
| Alpine Lady's Mantle | Milspinda | June - Aug |
| Wild Thyme | Taegirse | June - Sept |
All plants are protected by law in the UK, including more than 150 species with special protection.
It is an offence to destroy or uproot any wild plant (unless this is accidental or permission has been given by the owner or occupier of the land) or to pick any of the specially protected plants, possess any part of them or advertise them for sale.
Wild flowers are best appreciated in the wild, where they belong and where others can come and enjoy their beauty. So take photos, please, not specimens.

Shetland offers the best wildlife-watching in Scotland - FACT.
Over a million breeding seabirds, the highest density of Otters in Europe, regular sightings of Killer Whales and superb displays of rare sub-arctic flora. Our award-winning holidays offer everything from fully guided wildlife weeks and long weekends, dedicated birdwatching holidays plus photographic, walking and insight holidays.
Visit our extensive website www.shetlandwildlife.co.uk or call Shetland Wildlife on 01950 422483 for a choice of over 30 holidays!
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