For short run publishing solutions and innovative school textbooks

040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 040 The Castle Hill Buttercup
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, 040 The Castle Hill Buttercup

040 The Castle Hill Buttercup

Regular price
$12.00
Sale price
$12.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 

As one of the rarest plants in New Zealand, the Castle Hill buttercup is at extreme risk of extinction. Not only are the plants a tasty meal for hares and rabbits, but invasive weeds can smother the plants and stabilise the mobile scree in which they live. Self-seeded plants of this species were discovered in 2023, the first time since 1978, 

This little booklet published by Lincoln University details conservation attempts to save this unique plant. 

From the book's official abstract: CASTLE HILL (920m) is a tor-studded limestone hill in the south-west corner of the intermontane basin variously known as the Broken River, Castle Hill or Trelissick basin. It gave its name to the Castle Hill Station on the Christchurch Arthur's Pass highway, a sheep run which begins near Lake Lyndon and was taken up by Porter Bros. in June 1858. Originally of 25,000 acres, 5,000 acres were added in February 1859 and another 5,000 in March 1861. In October 1864 the Porters sold Castle Hill to John and Charles Enys who had come to Canterbury from Cornwall in 1861. John was a keen amateur scientist, a keen collector of stamps and autographs and a generous giver of all kinds of natural history specimens to the Canterbury Museum. He was specially interested in butterflies and, as a keen angler, did much to introduce trout to the Waimakariri basin. He discovered marine fossils in the local limestones and bought the freehold so that they could be preserved. He had to sell Castle Hill in 1890 when he returned to England to look after the old home where he died in 1912. The first reference to the Castle Hill buttercup is in the second part of the "Handbook of the New Zealand Flora" 1867 when in his circumscription of Ranunculus chordorhizos J. D. Hooker refers to a plant occurring - "Waimakariri district, on limestone-gravel."

Booklet is in excellent condition.