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NBI
Annual Review
2001- 2002
HighlIghts
Chairman 's Report
Gardens
Research
Education
Biodiversity Policy&Planning
Marketing
HR & Finance
Financial Statements
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HIGHLIGHTS 2001-2002
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- Over 1 million people visit the National Botanical Gardens (NBGs)
during the year and visitor numbers increase at the Pretoria,
Witwatersrand, Free State and Harold Porter NBGs.
- The Witwatersrand NBG receives the Sanlam Business Achiever's
Award in the category of Ecotourism.
- The construction of a new Visitors' Centre and Environmental
Education Centre is completed at the Pretoria NBG.
- Kirstenbosch NBG receives the Best Tourist Attraction award
in the Cape Metropolitan Area in the MTN Premier Tourism Awards.
- New garden displays and visitor attractions are created, including
a Secret Garden at the Natal NBG and a Dune Walk at the Harold
Porter NBG.
- Upgrade of the entrance area and tea garden facilities at the
Witwatersrand NBG.
- Another book is published in the Kirstenbosch Gardening Series:
Grow nerines.
- The 10th season of Appletiser Summer Sunset Concerts at Kirstenbosch
raises over R1 million for the Garden.
- The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on the Environment visits
both the Karoo Desert NBG and Harold Porter NBG.
- The Natal NBG wins an award for the best plant on show at the
annual Natal Clivia Show.
- Guided Garden visits are provided for 20 800 learners through
the environmental education programmes at the Pretoria, Witwatersrand
and Kirstenbosch NBGs.
- The Kirstenbosch Outreach Greening Programme begins five new
school greening projects and extends 11 existing school gardens.
- The NBI's herbaria undertake over 11 500 plant identifications.
- The Zulu Botanical Knowledge Project begins with funding by
WWF-SA and the National Research Foundation (NRF).
- A new species of Clivia is discovered in the Northern
Cape.
- The Department of Arts, Culture, Science & Technology awards
a grant to a consortium which includes the NBI to develop anti-malarial
drugs from the medicinal plants of the country.
- NBI publishes a colourful popular booklet summarizing the results
of earlier climate change research, The heat is on - impacts of
climate change on plant diversity in South Africa.
- Extensive research by the NBI into South Africa's land degradation
problem results in the publication of a popular book titled Nature
divided.
- The NBI is instrumental in completing a status survey and action
plan for the world's cycads for the IUCN.
- A new and very unusual species of Leucadendron is discovered
by the Protea Atlas Project.
- The Old Mutual-Kirstenbosch exhibit scoops its 24th gold medal
at the Chelsea Flower Show in London.
- Hits to the NBI website (www.nbi.ac.za) double while the use
of the www.plantzafrica.com site triples. By March 2002, both
sites are averaging 5 000 hits per day.
- A new directorate is created within the NBI to focus on issues
of biodiversity policy and planning.
- The NBI's Marketing Department receives two Marketing Excellence
awards from the Institute of Marketing Management (IMM).
- The NBI's Edith Stephens Wetland Project receives the Cape Times/Caltex
Outstanding Environmental Management Project Award.
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