Scientists from around the world gathered in Costa Rica this month to exchange ideas on ways to make sure orchids, among the world's most popular flowers, will still be around for the next generation to enjoy.
Many of the orchids of the future, mere seeds today, are in a deep slumber inside glass vials in sub-zero temperature cared for by botanists with a group that has an acronym that sounds like a secret spy group: the Orchid Seed Stores for Sustainable Use (OSSSU).
Hugh Pritchard, a British scientist with the Millennium Seed Bank Project - an international plant conservation project coordinated by the Britain's Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew - said that the OSSSU hopes to build a network of seed banks around the world to preserve orchid seeds.
The initial focus will be on the 250 species of the 35,000 orchid species in danger of extinction, Pritchard said.
"One of the factors is over-exploitation of species in the forests with commercial ends; another is climate change that is expected to accelerate the extinction of many species over the next 40 years," Pritchard said.
Specialists from 23 countries belonging to the OSSSU concluded a five-day meeting on the subject here on Friday.
The project encourages scientists in each country to freeze large amounts of seeds of their native species at temperatures of -20 C.
"The seeds will serve in the future for species re-introduction projects, habitat restoration and other sustainable uses," Pritchard said.
Orchid seeds measure mere micrograms, so millions can be stored in vials in small freezer.
"Theoretically, a representative sample of seeds from all of the world's orchid species could be stored in a space no larger than that occupied by a few domestic refrigerators," Pritchard wrote in an article with co-author Philip Seaton in the October 2008 edition of Orchids magazine.
"Thus, seed banks can provide a means of preserving maximum genetic diversity in a minimum space, and at relatively little cost," the authors wrote.
Ecuadoran biologist Eduardo Sanchez said that at the meeting, scientists from each country had their own ideas on the best ways to preserve their species.
In Ecuador, for example, Cuenca University has decided to germinate 35,000 of the most marketable orchid species, then sell 10,000 of them at cut-rate prices to saturate the market and lower the demand.
They will then plant the remaining 25,000 in forests near rivers, at botanical gardens and at the university itself to encourage both eco-tourism and an appreciation for the flower, Sanchez said.
Tiiu Kull at the Estonian University of Life Sciences said there is a small number of orchid species in Estonia compared to the varieties found in tropical regions.
But they are extremely rare and in danger of extinction, Kull said.
In the Philippines there are native orchid species that are on the verge of extinction because they are being used as base for the production of hybrids, which are grown by the tens of millions for commercial use, said University of the Philippines Los Banos professor Lilian Patena.
Two earlier OSSSU workshops were held in China and Ecuador, both in 2007.
The scientists also exchanged technical advice on how best to run seed banks.
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