List of endemic species of the British Isles

{{short description|None}}

{{Wildlife of Great Britain}}

The British Isles have few endemic species due to past frequent glaciations and because of the proximity to Continental Europe and former land bridges which enabled species to re-colonise the islands from the continent following glaciations.{{cite book | last=Cunliffe | first=B. | title=Britain Begins | publisher=OUP Oxford | year=2013 | isbn=978-0-19-967945-4 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lOIVDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA50 | access-date=2020-07-11 | page=50}} Most endemic species to the British Isles are considered to be subspecies of a larger species, with mutations or adaptations slightly changing the species in the islands or in certain localities.

British conservationists often describe this as a "wiped clean effect" with repeated glaciations forcing many species out of the modern area of the islands to more southern latitudes in Europe and perhaps even driving some species extinct.

Some species which were present in Britain before past glaciations, often during periods with a warmer climate than now failed to return after the Last Glacial Maximum. Amongst these are Rhododendron ponticum and rabbits, both now considered invasive and non-native.

A species is only deemed native if it reached the British Isles without human intervention (either intentional or unintentional). That means that to be native the species must have reached Britain before the land bridge joining Britain to the continent was submerged. Alternatively, species can also be native when they have flown or swum to Britain, as is the case with many bird species which arrived after the submersion of the land bridge, a recent example of which is the collared dove which arrived in the 1950s. This also applies for plants which spread seed in the wind.

A few endemic species are Arctic-Alpine species, survivors of Arctic species of plants and animals which either adapted to the warming climate or became isolated in suitable areas of mountains or lakes which still retained a suitable micro-climate. A common misconception is that the entirety of the British Isles was under glaciers and was uninhabitable both for humans, plants and animals. Whilst unsuitable for most species, a number of Arctic species survived in the areas not under glaciers in southern areas of England, Wales and south west Ireland and were either driven to extinction in the British Isles or to micro-climatic refuges as the climate warmed and the Arctic conditions retreated north.

Most endemic species or subspecies however date to more recent, post-glacial times, many having spread via land bridges or along the Atlantic seaboard of Europe.

Origins of endemic species

  • Ice Age survivors in suitable micro-climates
  • Subspecies (offshoots) of a larger species, many may in turn develop into new species
  • Glacial or pre-glacial survivors which have become extinct across much of their former range or have never occurred outside of Britain.

Fungi

  • Geastrum britannicum – An earthstar fungus, first seen in Norfolk by Jonathan Revett, and confirmed as a distinct species in 2015. It has so far (2015) been found in at least fifteen locations in England and Wales.{{cite journal|last1=Blackman|first1=Stuart|title=New Species of the month|journal=BBC Wildlife|date=July 2015|volume=33|issue=402|page=17}}
  • Gibellula attenboroughii - A parasitic fungi discovered in 2021 in Northern Ireland in an abandoned gunpowder storeroom at Castle Espie. It uses arachnid species as a host to spread its spores. Endemic to the island of Ireland.{{Cite journal |last=Evans |first=H.C. |last2=Fogg |first2=T. |last3=Buddie |first3=A.G. |last4=Yeap |first4=Y.T. |last5=Araújo |first5=J.P.M. |date=2025 |title=The araneopathogenic genus Gibellula (Cordycipitaceae: Hypocreales) in the British Isles, including a new zombie species on orb-weaving cave spiders (Metainae: Tetragnathidae) |url=https://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/10.3114/fuse.2025.15.07 |journal=Fungal Systematics and Evolution |language=en |doi=10.3114/fuse.2025.15.07 |issn=2589-3823|pmc=11952189 }}

Bryophytes

  • Cornish path-moss (Ditrichum cornubicum) – endemic to Cornwall (a recent discovery in West Cork is probably an accidental introduction{{cite book|last=Holyoak|first=David T|title=Bryophytes: Liverworts (Marchantiophyta), Hornworts (Anthocerotophyta) and Mosses (Bryophyta). In Red Data Book for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly|year=2009|publisher=Croceago Press|location=Praze-an-Beeble|isbn=978-1-901685-01-5|pages=72–104}})
  • Derbyshire feathermoss (Thamnobryum angustifolium) – endemic to a single site in the Derbyshire Peak District.
  • Dixon's thread moss (Bryum dixonii) – Scotland only
  • Scottish thread moss (Pohlia scotica) – Scotland only
  • Scottish beard moss (Bryoerythrophyllum caledonicum) – Scotland only

Vascular plants

File:Scottish Primrose (Primula scotica) - geograph.org.uk - 822246.jpg, endemic to the north of Scotland and Orkney]]

In 1999, 47 species of flowering plants (430 including microspecies{{cite journal |author1=T. G. C. Rich |author2=G. Hutchinson |author3=R. Randall |author4=R. G. Ellis |title=List of Plants Endemic to the British Isles |year=1999 |journal=BSBI News |volume=80 |pages=23–27 |url=http://archive.bsbi.org.uk/bsbi_news_3.html |access-date=2015-06-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130820125954/http://archive.bsbi.org.uk/bsbi_news_3.html |archive-date=2013-08-20 |url-status=dead }}) were considered to be endemic to the British Isles, 32 of them in the "critical genera" Euphrasia, Limonium and Sorbus.{{cite book |author1=M. O. Hill |author2=J. O. Mountford |author3=D. B. Roy |author4=R. G. H. Bunce |year=1999 |title=Ellenberg's indicator values for British plants |id=ECOFACT Volume 2 Technical Annex |location=Huntingdon |publisher=Institute of Terrestrial Ecology |url=http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/6411/ |isbn=1-870393-48-1}} Further additions are made from time to time, as cited below.

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Subsequently, Hieracium attenboroughianum is an endemic plant which was discovered in the Brecon Beacons in 2004 and Hedlundia pseudomeinichii was discovered on the island of Arran in 2007. In 2015, a newly formed and endemic species of monkeyflower (Erythranthe peregrina) was identified in Scotland and the Scottish islands. Bromus interruptus is an endemic to England, which was extinct in the wild but has been reintroduced from saved seed.[https://gd.eppo.int/taxon/BROIP European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organisation - Bromus interruptus] The total number of endemic plant species has now grown to 52.

Spiders

  • Nothophantes horridus Merrett & Stevens, 1995 – the ground-weaver spider is found at four sites in Plymouth, Devon.{{cite web|title=Britain's rarest spider found at new site, and photographed|url=https://www.buglife.org.uk/news-%26-events/news/britain%E2%80%99s-rarest-spider-found-at-a-new-site-and-photographed|website=Buglife|access-date=10 February 2016}}

[[Amphipoda]] (freshwater)

  • Microniphargus leruthi – found across Ireland, Wales and Southern England. Comprises three 'cryptic species'.
  • Niphargus glennei (Spooner) – the south-western ground water shrimp is found in Cornwall and Devon.{{cite book|last1=Gainey|first1=P A|title=Amphipoda. In Red Data Book For Cornwall And The Isles Of Scilly|publisher=Croago Press|location=Praze-an-Beeble|page=177|edition=2nd}}
  • Niphargus irlandicus – found in aquifers and cave systems across most of southern and central Ireland
  • Niphargus wexfordensis – found in Wexford, Ireland

Insects

  • Eudarcia richardsoni (Walsingham, 1900) – a micromoth only found on the Dorset coast{{cite web|title=202 Eudarcia richardsoni|url=https://ukmoths.org.uk/show.php?id=6680|publisher=UKmoths|access-date=7 May 2012}}
  • Piesma quadratum spergulariae – a Heteroptera bug found on the Isles of Scilly{{cite book|last=Alexander|first=Keith N A T|title=Hemiptera. In Red Data Book for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly|year=2009|publisher=Croceago Press|location=Praze-an-Beeble|isbn=978-1-901685-01-5|pages=214–232}}
  • Bombus muscorum scyllonius (Richards), Scilly bee – a bumble bee, which in the 1960s was found on all the inhabited islands of the Isles of Scilly with the exception of Bryher, and currently is only known from St Agnes, Great Ganilly and Great Arthur.{{cite journal|last=Beavis|first=Ian|title=Bees, Wasps and Ants of Scilly|journal=Isles of Scilly Bird and Natural History Review 2002|year=2003|pages=168–183}}
  • Psylliodes luridipennis, Lundy cabbage flea beetle – known only from the island of Lundy, where it feeds upon the Lundy cabbage.{{Cite journal | doi = 10.1046/j.1365-2745.2000.00477.x| title = Coincya wrightii (O.E. Schulz) Stace (Rhynchosinapis wrightii (O.E. Schulz) Dandy ex A.R. Clapham)| journal = Journal of Ecology| volume = 88| issue = 3| pages = 535| year = 2000| last1 = Compton | first1 = S. G.| last2 = Key | first2 = R. S.| doi-access = free| bibcode = 2000JEcol..88..535C}}
  • Ceutorhynchus contractus var. pallipes – a weevil that, like the Lundy cabbage flea beetle, is known only from the island of Lundy, where it feeds upon the Lundy cabbage.
  • Papilio machaon britannicus – a subspecies of swallowtail butterfly confined to the Norfolk broads{{Cite web |title=UK Butterflies - Swallowtail - Papilio machaon |url=https://www.ukbutterflies.co.uk/species.php?species=machaon |access-date=2024-08-09 |website=www.ukbutterflies.co.uk}}
  • Erebia epiphron mnemon – a subspecies of the alpine mountain ringlet butterfly
  • Perlodes mortoni – a stonefly with bracypterous males{{Cite web |title=Perlodes mortoni, Orange-striped Stonefly, identification and imitation |url=https://www.first-nature.com/insects/p-perlodes-mortoni.php |access-date=2024-08-09 |website=www.first-nature.com}}
  • Capnia vidula anglica – a subspecies of stonefly found in Scotland{{Cite web |title=Capnia vidua subsp. anglica {{!}} NBN Atlas Scotland |url=https://scotland-species.nbnatlas.org/species/NBNSYS0000022436 |access-date=2024-08-09 |website=scotland-species.nbnatlas.org}}
  • Brachyptera putata – a stonefly mostly found in Scotland, with limited records in the River Usk in Wales and the Wye in Hereford{{Cite journal |date=July 2011 |title=Species dossier: Brachyptera putata |url=https://cdn.buglife.org.uk/2019/07/Brachyptera-putata-species-dossier.pdf |journal=Action for Invertebrates Project (Buglife)}}
  • Taeniopteryx nebulosa britannica – a stonefly found in northern Great Britain{{Cite web |title=Taeniopteryx nebulosa subsp. britannica {{!}} NBN Atlas |url=https://species.nbnatlas.org/species/NHMSYS0020784625 |access-date=2024-08-09 |website=species.nbnatlas.org}}
  • Botanophila fonsecai – a small seed fly endemic to a 100m stretch of sand in Scotland{{Cite journal |last=Gibbs |first=D. |date=2013 |title=Survey and ecology of Botanophila fonsecai Ackland (Diptera, Anthomyiidae), a seed-fly endemic to Scotland. |url=https://www.nature.scot/sites/default/files/2017-11/Publication%202013%20-%20SNH%20Commissioned%20Report%20618%20-%20Survey%20and%20ecology%20of%20Botanophila%20fonsecai%20Ackland%20%28Diptera%2C%20Anthomyiidae%29%2C%20a%20seed-fly%20endemic%20to%20Scotland.pdf |journal=Scottish Natural Heritage Commissioned Report No. 618}}
  • Psammoporus insularis – a scarab beetle
  • Reliquantha variipes – an anthomyzid fly
  • Molophilus pusillus – a crane fly
  • Creagdhubhia mallochorum – a fungus gnat
  • Thinobius newberyi – a rove beetle
  • Halobrecta princeps – a rove beetle
  • Cixius caledonicus – a planthopper
  • Ceratophyllus fionnus – a flea
  • Dilta chateri – a bristletail{{Cite journal |last=Macadam |first=C. R. |date=2023 |title=Britain's Endemic Invertebrates |url=https://cdn.buglife.org.uk/2023/11/Endemic-Species-Report-2023-Final.pdf |journal=Buglife |publisher=The Invertebrate Conservation Trust |location=Peterborough}}
  • Nothogeophilus turki - a centipede

Isopods

Metatrichoniscoides celticus Oliver & Trew, 1981 - a small woodlouse usually below 3 mm. It is found only on maritime cliffs in the Vale of Glamorgan from Ogmore-by-Sea to St Donat's.

Birds

Britain has few endemic species of birds but quite a few subspecies. A few Arctic-Alpine species have subspecies in the British Isles, some have been in the islands since the last Ice Age, but many spread in the immediate Sub-Arctic conditions as the ice retreated. Furthermore, these species were later reinforced by newer arrivals as the climate assumed temperatures and conditions more similar to the present day.

Image:MotacillaAlbaDistribution.svg subspecies, with British pied wagtail (Motacillia alba yarellii) highlighted in blue.]]

Mammals

Britain has a few subspecies of mammals but no endemic species. Many again are Ice Age survivors that adapted to the new conditions; others arrived in warmer conditions whilst the land bridge still existed.

Image:Felis silvestris silvestris.jpg

Aquatic fauna

=Cnidaria=

The Cnidaria are a group of animals found exclusively in aquatic and mostly marine environments. They include sea anemones, sea pens and corals and their distinguishing feature is cnidocytes, specialized cells that they use mainly for capturing prey.{{cite book|last=Gainey|first=Paul T|title=Hydroids, Sea Anemones and Jellyfish (Cindaria). In Red Data Book for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly|year=2009|publisher=Croceago Press|location=Praze-an-Beeble|isbn=978-1-901685-01-5|pages=449–456}}{{cite journal |author1=Holstein T. |author2=Tardent P. | title =An ultrahigh-speed analysis of exocytosis: nematocyst discharge | journal =Science | volume =223 | issue =4638 | pages =830–833 | year =1984 | doi =10.1126/science.6695186 | pmid =6695186 |bibcode=1984Sci...223..830H }}

=Fish=

In some areas of uplands in the British Isles the retreating glaciers left melt water in hollows which had been carved out by the movement of ice. In these, Arctic species of fish survived, due often to the sheer depth of the lakes and the colder temperatures. For the young endemic fish varieties of the British Isles, it is usually controversial whether they should be considered as distinct taxa (species or subspecies) or just as isolated populations of their ancestral species.

As global warming affects the British climate there is some concern for these species, some confined to a handful of lakes. Action has been taken to protect them, as is the case with vendace which has been moved to tarns in nearby mountains due to the cooler temperatures. It is hoped that these will act as refuges should the species die-out in the lower-level lakes where they occur naturally.

Extinct

{{Expand section|this article as it requires expansion.|date=September 2011}}

Distribution

The distribution of endemic species seems to have a north western bias and with endemic species on the whole showing an oceanic / alpine distribution with most endemics being found in upland areas or islands.

Endemic livestock breeds

{{See also|Rare Breeds Survival Trust}}

Human bred-animals are not usually classified as distinct subspecies but rather breeds which is a similar concept. However some animals such as Iron Age pigs are classified as a distinct species from their wild relatives.

See also

References

{{Reflist|2}}

{{Fauna of Great Britain}}

{{Animals of Ireland}}

Category:Ecology of the British Isles

Endemic

British Isles

british