In 2024 horticulturalists made single biggest introduction of rare seeds to collection in the past decade
The Codonopsis clematidea smells like a skunk, the Tulipa toktogulica has a peculiar, elongated bulb and the Fritillaria imperialis is exceptionally tall. But to the horticulturalists who journeyed to remote alpine meadows and forests to find these rare flowers growing in the wild this year, they are nothing less than the “jewels of the earth”.
Now, the seeds from these and hundreds of other wild plants that were collected in Georgia and Kyrgyzstan have entered the living collections at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew.
More Stories
Russian scientist held in Ice jail charged with smuggling frog embryos into US
Elon Musk shows he still has the White House’s ear on Trump’s Middle East trip
Trump agrees deal for UAE to build largest AI campus outside US