Western Morning News (Saturday)

Study: 1 in 3 endangered plants cannot be saved

- BY EMILY BEAMENT

More than a third of critically endangered plant species cannot be preserved in seed banks to save them from extinction, researcher­s have warned.

Efforts to conserve plants, trees and wild relatives of crops outside their natural habitat mostly focus on storing seeds using a process of drying and then deep freezing them at minus 20C in seed banks.

A global strategy for plant conservati­on has set a target to conserve 75% of threatened species outside their natural habitat – or “ex-situ” – by 2020, in places such as Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank at Wakehurst Place, West Sussex.

But for many of the at-risk plants, convention­al “seed banking” will not work, prompting a need for urgent investment and research into alternativ­es to preserve some of the world’s most threatened plants, the researcher­s said.

A study last year by researcher­s from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, estimated that about 8% of all the world’s plants produce seeds which cannot be banked, including important UK tree species such as oak, horse and sweet chestnuts, and global foods including avocado and cocoa.

Now new research from the team at Kew suggests the problem may be worse for species that are at risk of extinction.

Researcher­s used four major plant lists and looked at various categories of threatened plants to see how many species are likely to be “bankable”.

They estimate 36% of the most at risk of extinction, or critically endangered species, produce “recalcitra­nt seeds”.

This means they do not survive the drying process and cannot be frozen, making them “unbankable”, the study published in the journal Nature Plants said.

More than a quarter (27%) of endangered species produce seeds that cannot be banked, along with 35% of plants considered to be “vulnerable” to extinction.

It is a particular problem for trees, with 33% of all the world’s tree species producing seeds that do not survive the drying process, the study suggests.

In tropical moist forests, such as rainforest­s or cloud forests, as many as half the species of trees which create the canopy can be unsuitable for preserving in seed banks.

An alternativ­e to convention­al storage in seed banks, which can also be unsuitable for seeds which survive the drying and freezing process but still do not last for more than a few years, could be “cryopreser­vation”.

The preservati­on technique, which involves removing the embryo from the seed and using liquid nitrogen to freeze it at much colder temperatur­es of minus 196C, could allow unbankable seeds to be preserved.

Conserving the forest may be the only feasible tool for many plants, conservati­onists warn.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom