Wild Daffodil - Narcissus pseudonarcissus
The golden yellow trumpet flowers of Daffodils are unmistakable, but there are numerous cultivars in addition to the Wild Daffodil so expert help is needed to confirm the true Wild Daffodil. The native plants always have a darker yellow flower tube and slightly twisted petals (strictly speaking tepals). The flower is generally smaller and more nodding than cultivated varieties.
Cultivated Daffodils
Cultivated Daffodils are planted regularly and any unconfirmed records should be added as Cultivated Daffodil agg, unless they have been confirmed as Wild Daffodils.
Ash and Oak woods, scrubby banks and pastures.
Flowering March and April, possibly earlier.
A bulbous perennial herb.
Quite local and probably declining in Britain.
The well-known colony on Harby Hills may be native in Leicestershire and Rutland; other records very likely to be introductions or the hybrid garden plant.
It is not on the current RPR (Hall & Woodward, 2022), but is listed as 'data deficient' because it is not clear whether records are of introduced/escaped plants or natives.
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Species profile
- Common names
- Daffodil
- Species group:
- Wildflowers
- Kingdom:
- Plantae
- Order:
- Asparagales
- Family:
- Amaryllidaceae
- Records on NatureSpot:
- 2
- First record:
- 23/03/2020 (Leonard, Pete)
- Last record:
- 05/04/2020 (Lewis, Steven)
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% of records within its species group
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