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Stachys spectabilis

4.7 Endangered

name of participantsBased on: "The Red Book of Israeli Plants - Threatened Plants in Israel" by Prof. Avi Shmida, Dr. Gadi Pollack and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir
Update Time: Jan. 1, 2011, 7:39 a.m.

In Israel Stachys spectabilis grows only in the Dan Valley, in the northern part of the Hula Valley. Previously, a large permanent population grew in the area between the Nuhela Springs and Tel-Dan. Specimens were also found in Dafna, and the banks of the Hatsbani Stream. S. spectabilis was found in 1940 in Kfar Gil’adi (the source of the notation in the Flora – "grows in the Upper Galilee") and in 1967 in Botmia on the Golan. In the survey of water bodies conducted in 1974 by the Nature Reserves Authority special emphasis was placed on this species and it was found only in the Dan Valley in Israel.
In 2000 and 2003, botanical tours were conducted in Nuhela Springs but S. spectabilis was not found.

On stream banks and canals in which clear water flows, in sunny places. Usually grows on the border between grain fields and raspberry stands.

Stachys spectabilis may be extinct in Israel. In the only area where it grows, in the Hula Valley, no systematic plant survey was conducted and the rare plant survey of the Nature Reserves Authority and of ROTEM – the Israel Plants Information Center – has not reached this region. Therefore, we have no confirmed information as to whether the species is extinct in the Hula Valley, the Golan streams and from the entire country.

A comprehensive survey should be conducted to try to locate Stachys spectabilis. Unlike other red plants, where populations can be transferred from other sites in Israel or from neighboring countries, S. spectabilis does not grow in Syria and in Lebanon, and so it is important to go back and to locate it. When populations are detected, they should be used to populate well-lit areas with running water in the reserves: Tel Dan, Snir Stream or Nuhela Springs.

Its distribution limited to the northern Middle East: northern and eastern Turkey, the Amanos Mountains in southern Turkey, northwestern and central Iran and the Caucasus. The species is not found in Lebanon and Syria.

Stachys spectabilis is a perennial herbaceous species growing on river banks and freshwater canals. In Israel, it grows only in the Dan Valley in the northern Hula Valley, and may have recently become extinct. The Dan Valley is southernmost point in the species' range. In the past fifty years Israel's water bodies have decreased drastically, in particular the natural water bodies in the Hula Valley. S. spectabilis, which once grew in the Dan Stream and the Nuhela Springs, has disappeared and may be extinct.

name of participantsBased on: "The Red Book of Israeli Plants - Threatened Plants in Israel" by Prof. Avi Shmida, Dr. Gadi Pollack and Dr. Ori Fragman-Sapir

Current Occupancy Map

Current occupancy map for observations per pixel
1000 squre meter pixel 5000 squre meter pixel 10000 squre meter pixel
number of observations 0 0 0
in total pixels 0 0 0

FamilyLamiaceae
ClassificationOn the endangered species list
EcosystemMediterranean humid
ChorotypeSouthern Euro-Siberian
Conservation SiteNuhela Springs

Rarity
1
5
6
Vulnerability
0
3
4
Attractiveness
0
0
4
Endemism
0
0
4
Red number
1
4.7
10
Peripherality 0
IUCN category DD EW EX LC CR EN VU NT
Threat Definition according to the red book Endangered
1 (1) districts
Disjunctiveness: High
50.0% of protected sites

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