The battle to save Russia’s Pavlovsk seed bank
The battle to save Russia’s Pavlovsk seed bank
Free Online Articles Directory
Why Submit Articles?
Top Authors
Top Articles
FAQ
ABAnswers
0 && $.browser.msie ) {
var ie_version = parseInt($.browser.version);
if(ie_version Login
Register
Hello
My Home
Sign Out
Email
Password
Remember me?
Lost Password?
Home Page > Education > Science > The battle to save Russia’s Pavlovsk seed bank
The battle to save Russia’s Pavlovsk seed bank
Posted: Sep 29, 2010 |Comments: 0
|
]]>
The battle to save Russia’s Pavlovsk seed bank
Scientists and conservationists are waging an international campaign to save Russian botanist Nikolai Vavilov’s Pavlovsk seed bank from being turned over to housing developers
Russia launches inquiry into Pavlovsk seed bank after Twitter campaign
Pavlovsk seed bank faces destruction
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev has ordered an immediate inquiry into the Pavlovsk research station being turned into private housing.
In 1929, Russian botanist Nikolai Vavilov traveled to Central Asia on one of the many seed-collecting expeditions that took him to five continents over more than two decades. In what is now present-day Kazakhstan, Vavilov , the father of modern seed banks — found forests of wild fruits and numerous cultivated varieties. Around the city of Alma Ata, he was astonished by the profusion of apple trees, writing in his journal that he believed he had “stumbled upon the center of origin for the apple, where wild apples were difficult to even distinguish from those which were being cultivated.”
Correctly surmising that this region of Kazakhstan was “the chief home of European fruit trees,” Vavilov collected the seeds of the many varieties of apple and other trees, eventually hauling them back to his scientific base in Leningrad, now St. Petersburg.
The trees that sprouted from those seeds, and more than 5,000 other varieties of fruits and berries, now grow in a sprawling, 1,200-acre collection of fields about 20 miles south of St. Petersburg, not far from the opulent, 18th-century czarist palace of Pavlovsk. This living repository of trees and bushes — with Europe’s most extensive collection of fruits and berries — has been at the center of a dispute in recent months as a federal Russian housing agency has tried to confiscate part of the Pavlovsk Research Station to clear the land for upscale dachas for Russia’s burgeoning new elite.
The fate of the station is now in limbo as, after an intense lobbying campaign by botanists and conservation groups around the world, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev has announced that the government is investigating the effort to uproot one of the most valuable botanical collections on Earth.
The priceless nature of the Pavlosk station can be traced directly back to Vavilov and his painstaking efforts to collect seeds from what he viewed as hot spots of plant diversity around the world, now known as Vavilov Centers. His insights into the importance of preserving botanical genetic diversity, particularly among food crops, are highly relevant today as that diversity faces unparalleled threats from industrial agriculture dominated by monoculture crops, destruction of wild habitats, and climate change.
The heat wave and subsequent fires that have destroyed much of Russia’s wheat harvest this year may have helped increase the chances that Vavilov’s storehouse of plants will live on at Pavlovsk. The fires triggered new fears in Russia about the nation’s ability to feed itself and the impact of global warming, and raised the profile of scientists working to protect the country’s food varieties. As the heat wave has faded, many Russians are now hoping that Pavlovsk can be saved.
The Pavlovsk Research Station, part of the N.I Vavilov Research Institute of Plant Industry houses one of the world’s largest collections of seeds and planted crops, roughly 90 percent of which are found in no other scientific collections in the world. The station’s inventory includes almost a thousand types of strawberries from more than 40 countries; a similar number of black currant varieties from 30 countries, including North America, Europe and the Far East; 600 apple types collected from 35 countries; and more than a hundred varieties each of gooseberries, cherries, plums, red currants, and raspberries. More than half of the black currant varieties grown in Russia, the world’s leading producer, were bred at Pavlovsk. Sales of black currants in Russia are valued at more than $400 million annually.
These old varieties are still needed to provide genes to protect commercial varieties against new threats ranging from pests to climate change, and to confer new attributes. Such older varieties are mostly held in trust by commercial and international institutions, either in the form of seeds held in cold storage or plantings in places like Pavlovsk.
The station had seemed destined to fall victim to a drive by the Russian government to free up public land for sale to developers. Pavlovsk is in the St. Petersburg suburb of Pushkin and is increasingly surrounded by up-market apartments and holiday homes, in an area made fashionable because of its proximity to Pavlovsk, the palace built by Catherine the Great. In late 2009, the Russian Ministry of Economic Development handed over one-fifth of the station’s fields to the Federal Fund of Residential Real Estate Development, which is tasked with finding housing land.
The Vavilov Institute appealed the decision. The case has been rumbling on in the courts ever since. But the Pavlovsk station’s director, Fyodor Mikhovich, who has worked there for 32 years, says he was told by one official: “Go to sleep. Just go to sleep. We are taking the land.”
A sign at Pavlovsk marks a collection of decorative perennial plants.
News that the Pavlovsk station was threatened with a state land grab first emerged over the summer. However, what looked like a done deal has attracted a high-profile international campaign that could be on the verge of success — just as the world’s governments meet in Japan next month to celebrate the International Year of Biodiversity.
Cary Fowler, an American conservationist who runs the Global Crop Diversity Trust in Rome, Italy, visited the station earlier this year. He says the loss of the collection would be “the largest intentional, preventable loss of crop diversity in my lifetime.”
It remains unclear exactly how much of the collection will be destroyed by the development. The scientists there say that three-quarters of their “priceless collection” is grown on the 227 acres being demanded for housing. This encompasses all its berries, including its strawberries, red currants, black currants, and gooseberries”. The federal real estate fund says publicly that the fields are “not utilized” and are “covered with weeds and mowed grass.” But its own report of its visit to the station last year says that half the land on one of the two plots they plan to build on is “utilized for berry trees.”
In any case, Fowler says the long-term intention is clear. The region’s planners have zoned the entire station for development, and the land that the federal real estate fund wants to take first is in the middle of the station’s fields. “So if they get that, it is only a question of time before the rest of the fields will be taken,” says Fowler.
The station is undeniably dilapidated and little plant breeding or research into plant genomes is now carried out there. A visit by American scientists from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, as long ago as 1975, said “the buildings are old and run down and poorly equipped… the laboratories are grossly inadequate by U.S. standards.” Stripped of funds since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, parts of the station lie virtually abandoned. In other areas, the staff does little more than maintain the collection of old varieties. Even so, the collection is unique and potentially of great value.
In recent years, nobody has crosschecked the station’s plants with other collections outside Russia. “It is possible that some samples are being duplicated elsewhere, but the majority are not,” says the director general of the Vavilov Institute, Nikolai Dzyubenko. Nonetheless, international authorities say the collection probably contains many genes of potentially great value in developing new commercial varieties. Many of its varieties are unusually hardy in cold temperatures and are disease-resistant.
“It would be a major tragedy if the collection were lost,” says one of the world’s leading strawberry breeders, Jim Hancock of Michigan State University. Norman Looney, president of theInternational Society for Horticultural Science, says the station’s collection “represents work performed over more than 150 years and has survived both climatic and political catastrophe. It is the largest such collection in Europe and the only one at this far-north latitude.”
Vavilov began collecting plants across Asia in 1916, working first on wild and early cultivated varieties of wheat and other grain crops, before moving on to other crops and other continents and establishing the research stations that housed his collections. Through his travels in the Caucasus, Afghanistan, the Pamir Mountains of Central Asia, Japan, China, Korea, the Middle East, North Africa, and Latin America, Vavilov realized that cradles of botanical diversity were most often found in mountainous regions, where the many changes in topography and climate led to the evolution and development of highly diverse species.
Vavilov’s successors have continued his work until today, particularly in Siberia and the Russian Far East, where wild berries remain an important part of the local diet. Sergey Alexanian, vice director of international relations for the Vavilov Institute, says “there have been hundreds of explorations involving thousands of researchers.”
Crop diversity has always been the Cinderella of conservation, even though the hundreds of thousands of crop varieties bred by farmers and scientists over several millennia represent a hugely important resource. But the fight to save the Pavlovsk station has attracted a great deal of international support. Fowler launched a “Tweet Medvedev” campaign in mid-July. And top crop scientists and research organizations have added their voices to the protests, including DIVERSITAS, a network of scientists devoted to preserving biodiversity, and the International Society for Horticultural Science.
The international campaign has clearly helped buy time for the station and may ultimately save it. Earlier this month, the federal real estate development fund announced that it had postponed the auction of the first parcel of land, intended for Sept. 23, until at least the end of October, and had set up an international scientific commission to look into the issue and make recommendations.
Retrieved from “http://www.articlesbase.com/science-articles/the-battle-to-save-russias-pavlovsk-seed-bank-3373043.html”
(ArticlesBase SC #3373043)
Submit articles to Articlesbase.com, and watch your traffic increase. Click here to make it happen.
Liked this article? Click here to publish it on your website or blog, it’s free and easy!
alam.md -
About the Author:
]]>
Questions and Answers
Ask our experts your Science related questions here…
200 Characters left
Rate this Article
vote(s)
0 vote(s)
Feedback
RSS
Print
Email
Re-Publish
Article Tags:
battle, save, russias pavlovsk, seed bank, st petersburg, wide varieties of seeds of different crops, fruits, plants, flowers
Latest Science Articles
More from alam.md
The History of Previous Seed Banks
A look into previous attempts to hold seed banks in various locations worldwide. (05:01)
Initiating the Doomsday Vault in the North Pole
Take a look into the global effort to conserve plant and crop seeds in a seed bank. (05:38)
Overcoming the Difficulties of Seed Ownerships for the Doomsday Vault
Learn about the seed ownership of different countries sending their agricultural seeds to the Doomsday Vault for testing. (06:14)
The Use of the Doomsday Vault in the North Pole
The Doomsday Vault is supposed to be an attraction and not a place to be hidden. (04:27)
How to Test the Viability of Older Seeds
Do you have seed packets from past seasons lying around, but aren’t sure whether the seeds are any good anymore? Dave shows you a great trick for determining whether or not it’s worth planting them this season. (02:54)
Floor scale – where low level means high performance
It is an irony that a floor scale improves the performance of the scale by lowering the height at which the objects weight is measured.
By:
Lawrence Denissonl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 18, 2011
Review of the Sky-Watcher Explorer 130P Telescope
The SkyWatcher Explorer 130P is, in my opinion, a very good entry level telescope for someone who wants to get into astronomy on a fairly limited budget. Priced in the range £180 to £200 (UK Sterling), the telescope should hopefully be affordable to most people.
By:
John Dixonl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Pre Algebra is required to study higher level of mathematics and develop quick algebraic skills. It is also helpful in planning and executing day-to-day activities efficiently.
By:
timcyhoodl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Homework Help – Do the Homework Right
Doing homework is important. In addition, assignment given should be in a manner that it looks interesting and not a tedious task. One can take into consideration homework help to ease the load.
By:
timcyhoodl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Effective Online Homework Help
Homework help reduces the load of students and they can focus more on their academics. Many sites offer help regarding homework and the rates are affordable too.
By:
nelson carlinl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Algebra 1 is the stepping-stone to the next level of algebra. Since acquiring higher level of algebraic skill is important, one should focus on the middle school algebra to reach there.
By:
nelson carlinl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Discover The Importance of Solar Training
In the United States, the New Economic Stimulus Plan will enable solar installers one of, if not, the rapidly expanding job. As a matter of fact, the need and demand for experienced, trained and skilled solar installers will escalate dramatically in the years to come, even far beyond the great social and financial backing for renewable energy.
By:
Phoebel
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Although sulfuric acid is now one of the most commonly used chemicals, it was probably little known before the 16th cent. It was prepared by Johann Van Helmont (c.1600) by destructive distillation of green vitriol (ferrous sulfate) and by burning sulfur.
By:
jeniferl
Education>
Sciencel
Feb 17, 2011
Diet Soda may raise odds of Vascular Events
From the studies on soda water, it is found that the contents of sodium is much higher than the normal water, causing cardiovascular diseases, high blood pressure , strokes etc.
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Feb 13, 2011
10 Recommendations for Lowering Your Cancer Risk
It is highly recommended that lowering of cancer risks can be achieved if we fellow rules : lowering of weight, taking of mother’s milk for at least 6 months , vegetables, fruits, physical activities, lowering taking salts, or salt soaked meals, smoking, lowering of alcohols, red meat,and food of caloric values.
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Feb 06, 2011
New mosquito type raises concern
Scientists have identified a new type of mosquito. It is a subgroup of Anopheles gambiae, the insect species responsible for most of the malaria transmission in Africa. Researchers tell Science magazine that this new mosquito appears to be very susceptible to the parasite that causes the disease – which raises concern. The effective devise of controlling this disease is not well established
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Feb 06, 2011
Study Ties Hot Flashes to Lower Breast Cancer Risk
Here’s some good news for women ever bothered by hot flashes and other menopausal symptoms. We know that hormones are important to breast cancer risk, and we also know that menopausal symptoms occur primarily because of changes in hormones that women experience as they go through menopause
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Jan 27, 2011
Best and worst bottled water brands
More than half of the bottled water products surveyed failed EWG’s transparency test -18 percent didn’t say where their water comes from, and another 32 percent did not disclose any information on treatment or purity of water. Consumers have the right to know where their water comes from and what’s in it so they can make informed choices that affect the health of themselves and their families
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Jan 09, 2011
U.S. Officials Recommend Reduced Fluoride Levels in Water
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is recommending that the fluoride level in drinking water be set at 0.7 milligrams per liter of water, replacing the current recommended range of 0.7 to 1.2 milligrams
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Jan 09, 2011
Blood test may diagnose Alzheimer’s in its early stage
A blood test for biomarkers or specifically in this case antibodies produced by the immune system may potentially be used in the future to diagnose Alzheimer’s disease in its early stage.
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Jan 09, 2011
Circumcision helps stop wart virus, study finds
Researchers have documented yet another health benefit for circumcision, which can protect men against the AIDS virus, saying it can protect their wives and girlfriends from a virus that causes cervical cancer
By:
alam.mdl
Health>
Diseases and Conditionsl
Jan 09, 2011
Add new Comment
Your Name: *
Your Email:
Comment Body: *
Verification code:*
* Required fields
Submit
Your Articles Here
It’s Free and easy
Sign Up Today
Author Navigation
My Home
Publish Article
View/Edit Articles
View/Edit Q&A
Edit your Account
Manage Authors
Statistics Page
Personal RSS Builder
My Home
Edit your Account
Update Profile
View/Edit Q&A
Publish Article
Author Box
alam.md has 236 articles online
Articles Categories
All Categories
Advertising
Arts & Entertainment
Automotive
Beauty
Business
Careers
Computers
Education
Finance
Food and Beverage
Health
Hobbies
Home and Family
Home Improvement
Internet
Law
Marketing
News and Society
Relationships
Self Improvement
Shopping
Spirituality
Sports and Fitness
Technology
Travel
Writing
ADHD
Childhood Education
College and University
History
Homeschooling
International Studies
K-12 Education
Languages
Learning Disabilities
Online Education
Science
Tutoring
]]>
Need Help?
Contact Us
FAQ
Submit Articles
Editorial Guidelines
Blog
Site Links
Recent Articles
Top Authors
Top Articles
Find Articles
Site Map
Mobile Version
Webmasters
RSS Builder
RSS
Link to Us
Business Info
Advertising
Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2011 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved.
Popularity: 1% [?]
No related posts.
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.




