Eden Project welcomes 'extremely rare' palm tree discovered in 2006

Catherine Cutler, Interim Head of Horticulture at the Eden Project admiring the critically endangered palm tree
-Credit: (Image: Daniel Dayment / SWNS)


The Eden Project has welcomed a 'extremely rare' species of palm tree. The Tahina spectabilis is listed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List and will now be the rarest plant in the Rainforest Biome in Cornwall.

It was first discovered in 2006. It is thought that there are only 29 adult individuals growing in the wild and a very small number in cultivation.

The distinctiveness of this rare palm meant that a new, unique plant genus - a category normally grouping similar plants together - was created just for this single species.

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Cambridge University Botanic Garden (CUBG), which supplied the plant to the Eden Project, near St Austell, said: "This extraordinary palm, which can grow up to 18 metres tall with leaves fanning out to over five metres, had outgrown its space at CUBG, prompting its move to the Eden Project."

The palm is known as Tahina Sectabillis, and listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List
The palm is known as Tahina Sectabillis, and listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List -Credit:Daniel Dayment / SWNS

Luigi Leoni, team leader, glasshouses and nursery at CUBG, says: “It’s really exciting for the Tahina palm to be able to reach its full size at the Eden Project with its huge roof space. Its new home will probably allow this critically endangered species to flower and produce seeds in a few decades’ time—something that would not have been possible at CUBG.”

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