Apr 29, 2021 | News
A national meeting of more than 200 scientists and government, industry and community representatives has issued a Statement of Concern on Myrtle Rust, with a call for individuals and organisations to add their signatures. The Statement is directed to all Australian governments, and calls on them to endorse and fund a national action plan for this introduced plant disease.
In late March more than 200 scientists and government, industry and community representatives met in Ballina NSW to discuss the introduced plant disease Myrtle Rust, a growing threat to Australian native plants and ecosystems. The ANPC has been active on Myrtle Rust since 2011, and was a partner in organising the symposium.
More than ten years after the arrival of Myrtle Rust in Australia, there is still no coordinated and funded national response. In those years, the list of Australian species known to be capable of infection has grown to nearly 400 species. Five species are known to be in catastrophic decline, including two that were, before 2010, common along the east coast but are now listed as Critically Endangered due to Myrtle Rust. It is estimated that a further 40+ species are at high risk ‒ they all need urgent field assessment and germplasm conservation as a precursor to future recovery actions.
In the absence of an adequate national response by governments, the community of scientists and conservation practitioners active on the issue have evolved a National Action Plan for Myrtle Rust (www.apbsf.org.au, also at https://www.anpc.asn.au/myrtle-rust). This is a practical, science-based framework for the urgent actions needed to prevent extinctions, and to lay the basis for possible future recovery. The National Action Plan is already shaping research and action priorities for some institutions and State agencies.
But the Action Plan remains unfunded, and without formal endorsement by any government agencies.
“We face irreversible damage to our natural heritage and a permanent loss of biological resources if action is not taken”, says Bob Makinson, ANPC’s representative on the Symposium organising group and a co-author of the Action Plan. “This other, silent pandemic needs a nationally coordinated response and a basic level of resourcing. The Statement of Concern seeks to focus the attention of governments on this threat. We need signatures from concerned people, and especially from organisations in the science, conservation, Indigenous, and natural resource management areas. We ask all concerned individuals to bring the Statement to the attention of the peak committees of such organisations as soon as possible, and seek their endorsement of it.”
The Statement of Concern is open for signatures (organisational and individual) at https://www.apbsf.org.au/myrtle-rust/
Further information on Myrtle Rust is available at https://www.anpc.asn.au/myrtle-rust/
Apr 22, 2021 | Events Category
Orchid Conservation Symposium
The ANPC will be working with project partners to organise an orchid conservation symposium in 2021. This symposium to be held over two days will provide an online forum to increase awareness of the ecology and conservation of orchids amongst practitioners. It will also provide an opportunity to share the project’s results and promote networking among the orchid conservation community. The symposium is scheduled for 22 and 23 June 2021.
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Register for the Symposium here
Keynote speakers:
Professor Steve Johnson, Research Chair, University of Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa
Professor Rod Peakall, Professor in Evolutionary Biology, The Australian National University, ACT, Australia
Presenters:
| Ms Alyssa Weinstein, PhD candidate, The Australian National University, ACT, Australia |
| Dr Amy Hinsley, Senior Research Fellow, Oxford University, UK |
| Dr Belinda Davis, Research Scientist, Kings Park Science, Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, WA, Australia |
| Dr Bronwyn Ayre, Research Officer, La Trobe University, Vic, Australia |
| Professor Celeste Linde, Professor, The Australian National University, ACT, Australia |
| Dr Jenny Guerin, Seed Research Officer, South Australian Seed Conservation Centre, Botanic Gardens of South Australia, SA, Australia |
| Dr Gunter Fischer, Head of Flora Conservation, Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden, Hong Kong |
| Dr Jenifer Wraith, EcoCommons Business/Scientific Analyst and User Support Officer, Griffith University, QLD, Australia |
| Mr Len Carrigan, Volunteer, Australian Native Orchids Society, Victoria, Vic, Australia |
| Mr Marc Freestone, PhD Candidate, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, The Australian National University, Vic, Australia |
| Dr Myles Menz, Marie Sklodowska-Curie Research Fellow, Max Planck Institute, Germany |
| Dr Noushka Reiter, Senior Research Scientist, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, The Australian National University, Vic, Australia |
| Mr Richard Dimon, Research Assistant, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria, Vic, Australia |
| Dr Russell Barrett, Systematic Botanist, Royal Botanic Gardens Sydney, NSW, Australia |
| Dr Ryan Phillips, Senior Lecturer in Ecology, La Trobe University, Vic, Australia |
| Mr Tobias Hayashi, PhD candidate, The Australian National University, ACT, Australia |
Mar 1, 2021 | News
On Friday 19 February ANPC Healthy Seeds Project Manager, Dr Martin Driver, ran a seed collection workshop in Hay, NSW. The event was free to attend and is the first in a four-part series of workshops titled ‘4 Seasons of Seed’. Click here for details on the workshops.
Mar 1, 2021 | News
ANPC Florabank project Manager, Dr Lucy Commander is involved in a 1-day restoration conference in Perth taking place on Friday 19 March 2021. Hands Healing the Land – Community Science Conference provides an opportunity for land care practitioners, scientists and volunteers to share how they make a difference in caring for flora and fauna, learn from traditional owners and build community. Purchase tickets here.
Mar 1, 2021 | News
The Australian Plant Translocation Database is now live and available to download for free from the ANPC’s website. The database was assembled between 2016-2018 by researchers from the National Environmental Science Program’s Threatened Species Recovery Hub. This incredible resource contains data on translocations for 379 species from around Australia.