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‘Plants Going Places’ Victorian Translocation Symposium

‘Plants Going Places’ Victorian Translocation Symposium

Online Symposium – 21 & 28 July 2022

On Thursdays 21 and 28 July 2022 we held our Victorian Translocation Symposium over Zoom. It included presentations from experts and experienced practitioners in plant translocations and was based on the ANPC’s Guidelines for the Translocation of Threatened Plants in Australia.Thanks to the support from the Ross Trust this event was free for everyone to attend.

Please download the full program here. We look forward to seeing you online. The recordings from this symposium are available on our YouTube channel here.

 

Plant Treasures webinar recording

Plant Treasures webinar recording

The latest webinar in our series ‘Plant treasures – in conversation’ was held on Thursday 12 May 2022. This special extended webinar focused on ‘The role of the nursery and living collections in conserving native plant species’ while highlighting current practice and future needs. You can watch the recording on our YouTube channel here.

The webinar was opened by the Germplasm Guidelines project manager, Amelia Martyn Yenson. John Arnott (Curator of horticulture at the Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria and BGANZ Council Representative for Victoria) then gave a theme introduction before the following presentations and videos:

  • VIDEO: The role of the plant nursery and living collections in ex situ conservation (John Arnott & Warren Worboys)
  • Overview of the Germplasm Guidelines (Dr Amelia Martyn Yenson)
  • VIDEO: Cutting propagation in the conservation nursery (Mandy Thomson)
  • Trials, Tribulations & Triumphs in Managing a Botanic Gardens Seed Orchard (Lorraine Perrins)
  • The role of the ANBG nursery and living collections in plant conservation (Dr Zoe Knapp)
  • VIDEO: Collection, processing and storage of fern spores (Tom North)
  • Biosecurity considerations in living collections (Amanda Shade)
  • What we can learn from conservation of crop wild relatives? (Dr Sally Norton)
  • VIDEO: Using ex situ collections of Australian native species: Translocation and other end uses (Dr Emma Dalziell, Dr Leonie Monks and Dr Andrew Crawford)

The webinar was concluded with a panel discussion facilitated by Michael Elgey (Curator Manager, The Australian Botanic garden mount Annan and BGANZ Council Representative for NSW).

This series is a collaborative project between the ANPC and BGANZ Collections and Records Management Group and is funded by a grant from The Ian Potter Foundation.

New ANPC grant announced!

New ANPC grant announced!

 The ANPC is excited to announce that we have just received a new Environment Restoration Fund – Threatened Species Strategy Action Plan Grant. Entitled “Enabling future recovery of Rhodomyrtus psidioides by safe custody ex situ” the ANPC will be working with various state government departments and botanic gardens over the next 13 months to undertake a Myrtle rust pilot dispersed-custody model to enable sampling and repropagation of surviving wild germplasm, including genetic management program. R. psidioides faces extinction in the wild due to Myrtle Rust, and survivors do not set fruit. Seeds are unorthodox, and ex situ germplasm must be kept as whole-plant collections (pending tissue culture, feasibility uncertain), and dispersed for safety. A large genebank is essential for screening for rust resistance genes, and for eventual ecologically safe reintroduction.

Herbarium boxes available

Herbarium boxes available

The National Herbarium of NSW is heading to Mount Annan and will be moving their herbarium collections out of boxes and into compactus storage. There will be thousands of these boxes available, which may be useful in all sorts of nursery, garden, seedbank and storage operations, as well as herbaria. The dimensions of the boxes (in mm) are: 500 deep, 340 wide and 80 high. If you would like some please contact Hannah McPherson, Collections Manager (hannah.mcpherson@botanicgardens.nsw.gov.au).

Free workshop – 10 May 2022, Sydney

Free workshop – 10 May 2022, Sydney

The Research Centre for Ecosystem Resilience is hosting a free workshop at the Royal Botanic Garden, Sydney on Tuesday 10 May 2022. The workshop ‘Conservation and restoration genomics for field practitioners’ runs from 9:30am – 4pm, with lunch provided. The workshop focuses on introducing and explaining standardised workflows to guide efficient planning and application of genetic information across disparate projects. Register now at https://events.humanitix.com/introduction-to-conservation-genetics-and-genomics (limited to 50 participants).