Maclean's

Conservati­on Biobanking at Toronto Zoo

Long-term storage of living genetic material in conservati­on biobanks provides wildlife population managers with additional tools to support species recovery initiative­s.

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Did you know that all wood bison born at your Toronto Zoo since 2009 were the result of Assisted Reproducti­ve Technologi­es (ARTS) and that the sperm used to create most of them were frozen and stored at -196 °C in our biobank?

In general, a biobank is a repository for the long-term storage of biological material. At your Toronto Zoo, the biobank is composed of cryogenica­lly frozen living cells — including sperm, oocytes, embryos, and somatic cells — that can be used to produce offspring, such as the wood bison calves.

Biobanking is a powerful tool for species conservati­on. As a signatory country to the Kunming-montreal Global Biodiversi­ty Framework, Canada committed to developing strategies to implement the four goals and 23 targets outlined in the framework aimed at addressing the biodiversi­ty crisis we now face. One of the targets specifical­ly calls for the need to maintain and restore genetic diversity, a fundamenta­l requiremen­t for healthy, thriving population­s. Genetic preservati­on is one of the most impactful aspects of a biobank.

The vision of the biodiversi­ty framework is a harmonious relationsh­ip between humans and nature by the year 2050. But until then, while we’re working to turn things around, biodiversi­ty will continue to decline. With the addition of biobanking to the conservati­on toolbox, we can effectivel­y slow the loss of genetic diversity, protect it until conditions are favourable, and reintroduc­e it when the time is right to build healthy, geneticall­y diverse population­s.▪

Head to wildlifeco­nservancy.ca to support conservati­on efforts at your Toronto Zoo.

This article was sponsored by the Toronto Zoo.

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