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Other Seed Banks
While we certainly did not invent seed banking, we believe ours
is the first in the United States and perhaps in the world that
is dedicated exclusively to rare and endangered species. We owe
a great deal to staff at other seed banks who have assisted us from
the very beginning. Especially helpful were staff at the Royal Botanic
Gardens at Kew's Seed Bank at Wakehurst Place, and the USDA National
Seed Storage Laboratory at Ft. Collins, Colorado. These institutions
are now known as the Millennium Seed Bank, and the USDA National
Genetic Resources Program.
Below are some links to these and a few other Seed Banks around
the world.
Russia:
The great Russian botanist, N.I.
Vavilov was perhaps the first scientist to recognize the importance
to human welfare of maintaining off-site collections of the wild
ancestors and other relatives of crop plants.
Established in 1894, the N.I. Vavilov All-Russian
Scientific Research Institute of Plant Industry is the world's
first seed bank and one of the world's largest collections of plant
genetic material. During the World War II Siege of Leningrad (St.
Petersburg), many staff members literally starved to death protecting
the collections rather than growing food plants from the seeds saved
in the bank.
England:
With the dedication in 2000 of the Millennium
Seed Bank Project, RBG Kew's Wakehurst Place houses one of the
newest, most sophisticated and largest seed banks on the planet.
The Royal Botanic
Gardens, Kew established the Seed Bank at Wakehurst Place, in
1974, with a focus on plants of the arid tropics. Their seed
conservation program has an ambitious agenda that aims by the
year 2010 to have collected genetic samples from 24,000 plants,
or 10% of the planet's flora. The emphasis is on tropical and temperate
areas as well as the entire seed-bearing flora of the United Kingdom.
In 2003 RBG Kew published a landmark book, Seed
Conservation: Turning Science into Practice, edited by RD Smith,
JB Dickie, SH Linington, HW Pritchard, and RJ Probert, which will
likely serve as a central resource for many years to come. An overview
of the book, along with .pdf files of selected portions - including
a chapter by Berry Botanic Garden Conservation staff Ed Guerrant
and Andrea Raven - can be found here.
United States of America:
The National Center for Genetic Resources Preservation, formerly
known as the National
Seed Storage Laboratory (NSSL), in Fort Collins is among the
premier seed banks in the world. It is run by the USDA Agricultural
Research Service., and you can take a virtual
tour of their facilities!
Australia:
The Threatened
Flora Seed Centre works to conserve Western Australia's unique
plants. The Commonwealth
Scientific and Industrial Research Organization (CSIRO) stores
seeds of trees and food crops.
Other CPC seed banks:
Center
for Urban Horticulture (CUH) in Seattle, Washington.
Desert Botanical Garden
in Arizona.
Holden
Arboretum in Ohio.
Rancho Santa Ana
Botanic Garden in California.
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