Botanic Gardens, a Powerful Alliance for Conservation
A special issue of Journal of Zoological and Botanical Gardens (ISSN 2673-5636).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 January 2022) | Viewed by 8521
Special Issue Editor
Special Issue Information
In the 1960s, the serendipitous ex situ retrieval of the toromiro tree (Sophora toromiro (Phil.) Skottsb.), following its extinction from natural habitats, put botanic gardens in the spotlight of the conservation stage. The following decades were marked by several initiatives that exploited botanic garden collections to reintroduce lost species into natural habitats. The establishment or reorganization of IABG, BGCS (later BGCI), and scores of regional and national networks provided essential coordination of botanic gardens. However, despite encouraging successes with a few species, which were rescued and restored to their natural habitats, threats to biodiversity are still rampant worldwide. One hundred thirteen flowering plant species are extinct, according to IUCN. Its global Red List further includes 34 species as extinct in the wild and a staggering 16,667 as threatened, i.e., VU, EN, or CR.
This Special Issue of JZBG intends to explore the current projects, resources, and tools that the botanic garden community has developed to fight the loss of biodiversity. Furthermore, it aspires to find an answer to questions such as, but not limited to: Who is keeping track of how many threatened species grow in botanic gardens and how many do not? Is our knowledge on this subject comprehensive or do geographic/taxonomic gaps warp it? What are the most compelling stories that botanic gardens can tell to various audiences (scientists, conservationists, decision-makers, the general public)? What are the bitterest lessons learned? Have botanic gardens undergone significant changes to cater to conservation projects and practitioners? What resources are botanic gardens deploying to raise public awareness about the need for conservation practices? Are education programs firmly rooted in conservation?
Based on the contribution from leading researchers, the Special Issue will gauge the current efforts of botanic gardens toward a zero-extinction target.
Prof. Dr. Gianni Bedini
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- botanic garden collections
- threatened species
- biodiversity loss
- species conservation
- species translocation
- networking
- public awareness
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