Skip to content

Chester Zoo recognised as botanical garden due to plant conservation work

UK zoo cares for hundreds of plant species

chester zoo gardens

Chester Zoo has become the first UK zoo to gain international botanical garden status in recognition of its plant conservation work.

The Cheshire-based conservation charity is only the second zoo in Europe to receive an accreditation from Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI), the global organisation dedicated to plant conservation.


Philip Esseen, head of plants at Chester Zoo, said the recognition "shows that our plant work has real conservation value".

chester zoo garden

The zoo is "caring for species tat are threatened with extinction in the wild", with a responsibility to protect and propagate them.

Chester Zoo cares for hundreds of plant species, including UK and exotic flora, many of which are not normally found at zoos.

In addition to the gardens and planted areas open to guests, the zoo's team keeps thousands of plants behind-the-scenes for conservation and research.

Chester Zoo caring for threatened species

Richard Hewitt, team manager for Chester Zoo’s plant nursery, said: "In some cases, we are caring for plants that barely exist anywhere else.

"For example, there are three species from an island in the Madeiran archipelago which have almost disappeared from botanical gardens.

"We’ve been entrusted with seeds by the Madeiran government to help prevent their extinction."

chester zoo wildflower

The zoo’s plant team is also involved in the propagation and re-planting of threatened UK species, including black poplar, described as the most endangered native timber tree in Britain.

As part of a wider wellbeing campaign, Chester Zoo has also been encouraging guests to spend more time in its gardens and green spaces.

"The gardens give people places to pause, rest and reflect," said Esseen.

chester zoo garden

He added: "Unlike animals, plants are something people can get very close to. You can touch them, smell them, listen to them in the wind."

Patricia Malcolm, head of membership and conservation services at BGCI, said the accreditation aims to motivate gardens "to do more for plant conservation and increase their impact on visitors".

Images courtesy of Chester Zoo