Millennium Seed Bank Project
The
Millennium Seed Bank Project (MSBP) International Programme is a nine
year international plant conservation programme (2001 -2010), conceived,
developed and managed by the Seed Conservation Department at the Royal
Botanic Gardens, Kew, in the UK.
The two principal aims of the Programme are to:
- Collect and conserve 10% of the world's seed-bearing flora (some
24 000 species), by the year 2010.
- Develop bilateral research, training and capacity-building partnerships
worldwide in order to support and advance the seed conservation effort.
These
partnerships are formalized through Access and Benefit Sharing Agreements,
inspired by the Convention of Biological Diversity. The MSBP have to date
developed partnership projects in more than fourteen countries worldwide.
The MSBP partner in South Africa is the South African National Biodiversity Institute
and the project was formally launched in May 2000. The
national aim is to contribute seed of around 2500 (representing approximately
10% of South Africa's flowering plants) of South Africa's indigenous species
to this conservation effort through the collection of verified and well-documented
seed collections. Collecting is focused on endangered species, species
endemic to South Africa, and also species of known potential value to
humankind that may become endangered due to over-exploitation.
For more information visit the MSB
Project International Programme website or contact Erich van Wyk .
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