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Seed conservation in the Caribbean UK Overseas Territories

kppcont_085233By Tom Heller – From Kew Royal Botanic Gardens UK

Tom Heller from Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank brings partners from across the Caribbean together to learn about banking seeds of their native plants.

Capacity building

Capacity building is an important part of Kew’s work and is vital to help realise successful and lasting plant conservation in places where it is needed most.

October saw another example of the diverse ways in which Kew works to help the UK Overseas Territories secure the future of their great plant diversity. Partners from all five of the Caribbean UK Overseas Territories (Anguilla, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Montserrat, and the Turks and Caicos Islands) gathered at the Turks and Caicos Islands’ National Environment Centre (NEC) for a workshop on seed conservation.

kppcont_031343Seed conservation workshop

The meeting was generously hosted by TCI’s Department of Environment and Maritime Affairs, as part of a project to establish local seed banks in the UKOTs. The project, funded through Darwin Plus, the Darwin Initiative’s Overseas Territories Environment and Climate Fund, is enabling our partners to target their highest conservation priority plants for collecting and banking in-country, where they will be available for use in propagation and conservation work. Duplicate collections will also be stored at Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank, for additional long-term security.

Hands-on sessionskppcont_085232

As well as providing an opportunity to cover the most important principles behind seed conservation, the meeting also allowed my MSB colleague Janet Terry and me to give participants practical experience of many of the skills required to make and process high quality collections of seeds. This included heading out into the Turks and Caicos Islands bush to put into practice all of the seed quality and sampling considerations you need when collecting.

Stenandrium carolinae, North CaicosWe were even able to make a collection of one of the Caicos Islands’ inconspicuous yet alluring endemics, Stenandrium carolinae.

Cleaning fruit

Back at the NEC, participants were able to have a go at cleaning various fruit types, from dry grass seed heads to fleshy berries, using sieves and rubber matting.

The Department of Environment and Maritime Affairs’ native plant nursery

kppcont_085231We also visited the Department of Environment and Maritime Affairs’ native plant nursery on North Caicos, itself developed through support from the Overseas Territories Environment Programme, a predecessor of Darwin Plus. Here, essential propagation work on the threatened native Caicos pine is underway, as well as propagation of other important native species. It was a great opportunity to explore the possibilities offered by the capacity to store seed locally in supporting such valuable conservation work.UKOTs_004 (Long)-1

Conclusion

Our partners have now returned home, equipped with the skills needed to save the seeds of their most important plant species, as well as having forged new links with colleagues across the Caribbean UK Overseas Territories.

–       Tom –

PHOTOS:

Stenandrium carolinae, found only in the Caicos Islands (Image: Tom Heller, RBG Kew)

Participants learn how to clean seed collections with Janet Terry (Image: Tom Heller, RBG Kew)

The Turks and Caicos Native Plants Nursery (Image: Tom Heller, RBG Kew)

Project partners from Anguilla, British Virgin Islands, Cayman, Montserrat, Turks and Caicos Islands and RBG Kew (Image: C.A.Samuel, Anguilla Department of Environment)

UKOTs bloggers (left to right): Sara Bárrios, Pat Griggs, Colin Clubbe, Marcella Corcoran, Tom Heller, Martin Hamilton.

About us

Using modern plant specimens collected in the field and historic specimens held in Kew’s Herbarium, together with detailed habitat descriptions and other field information, we are documenting the plant diversity of the UKOTs. We are making this information accessible via the UKOTs Online Herbarium. This resource, together with the field research, enables us to undertake conservation assessments, produce Red Lists of threatened species, and rank potentially invasive species – all of which underpin the development of management plans to protect the UKOTs’ plant heritage.

The UKOTs bloggers are:

Colin Clubbe (Head of UKOTs and Conservation Training)

Martin Hamilton (UKOTs Programme Co-ordinator)

Marcella Corcoran (UKOTs Programme Officer – Horticultural Liaison)

Sara Bárrios (UKOTs Programme Officer – GSPC Targets 1&2 OTEP Project)

Pat Griggs (UKOTs Public Engagement Officer)

Tom Heller (UKOTs Millennium Seed Bank Officer)

For more on this story go to:

http://www.kew.org/news/kew-blogs/ukots/seed-conservation-training-in-caribbean-ukots.htm

 

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