The Scotsman

Botanics experts identify 73 new species

- By SARAH WARD newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Experts at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh have found 73 new species of flora since lockdown started.

A rhododendr­on from the mountains of Vietnam, named Rhododendr­on tephropepl­oides, has become the most recent to be added to the compilatio­n, which includes gingers, salvias and impatiens.

The pretty white flower was collected in 2014 on an expedition with Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and internatio­nal partners from Vietnam, the US and Canada.

Its publicatio­n in the Edinburgh Journal of Botany reflects how urgent work to document and understand the world's biodiversi­ty has continued in a bid to describe more than one new plant every week.

Experts focused their attentions on the little-studied Hoang Lien Son mountain range near the border with China, collected the plant on Phan Xi Păng mountain, the highest peak in the Indochines­e peninsula.

It is suspected to be under threat from soil erosion.

Lead author of the paper, Richard Baines, Curator of Logan Botanic Garden, a Regional Garden of RBGE, said: "Finding and recording plants is the very first step in protecting biodiversi­ty and, incredibly, we are still documentin­g plants previously unknown to science.

"Sadly, a great number of the species occurring in this area are severely threatened by deforestat­ion and agricultur­al cultivatio­n and barely exist other than in small, fragile, population­s.

"By collecting seeds from those plants in the wild and growing them on in botanic gardens in ex-situ conservati­on projects, we give them a better chance of survival."

Assistant Professor Nguyen Van Dzu from the Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources (IEBR), Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, added: "Our collaborat­ion with RBGE and other internatio­nal partners on recent expedition­s has had tangible results including the descriptio­n and naming of species new to science and a greater understand­ing of the threats to Vietnam's plant diversity."

Dr Alan Elliott, Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Network Manager, Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh said: "This new Rhododendr­on is the product of several years of collaborat­ive field studies with our partners in Vietnam.

"Intensive, coordinate­d field research and local knowledge are key to successful and integrated species conservati­on.

"Along with gaining a better understand­ing of the threats facing habitats and the conservati­on actions required to better protect species, we can also gain an increased knowledge of the biodiversi­ty of an area when we find undescribe­d diversity.

"The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh is the lead organisati­on in the Global Conservati­on Consortium for Rhododendr­on and as such this new Rhododendr­on is protected through RBGE'S commitment to provide a highly curated and scientific conservati­on collection of Rhododendr­on, across our four Gardens."

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 ??  ?? Above, The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, where among the new discoverie­s are two species of ginger, Globba Mollis, right, and Globba Luteola, below; left is Rhododendr­on tephropepl­oides
Above, The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, where among the new discoverie­s are two species of ginger, Globba Mollis, right, and Globba Luteola, below; left is Rhododendr­on tephropepl­oides
 ??  ?? Richard Baines, curator of Logan Botanic Garden
Richard Baines, curator of Logan Botanic Garden

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