Home / Resources and Writings / Weblog / Plant Conservation / Conserving the Gene Pool of Flowers

Conserving the Gene Pool of Flowers


The three-year-old Ornamental Plant Germplasm Center (OPGC), in Columbus, Ohio, is one of the few genebanks in the world to focus on preserving flower genes. Floral genetic diversity is being lost as breeders focus on particular traits and natural populations are threatened by development.

Genes are collected by the centre primarily from wild sources, but heirloom varieties and rare specimens in personal plant collections are also included. Preserving the genes is important to the future of ornamental plant breeding and potentially future plant discoveries for medicinal or other economic uses.

OPGC is one of 25 genebanks in the U.S. National Plant Germplasm System, and stores seeds, bulbs, and tissue from plants found all over the world.

Internationally, floriculture is worth $50 billion (US) per year.

Link:

Posted by Eric La Fountaine at 3:14 PM on October 13, 2004

Want to talk about this weblog entry? As of August 22, 2006, all new entries and most older entries are cross-posted to the UBC Botanical Garden Discussion Forums for discussion (you might need to use the search function to find the thread you are looking for).

This is an effort to reduce the amount of time spent dealing with spam (the forums are very good at stopping spam, the weblog commenting system is not so good).

Older entries already containing comments remain open for discussion.