• Privacy Policy
  • Editorial Policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Contact us
Friday, August 29, 2025
Glasgow Report
  • Home
  • World
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Science
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
Glasgow Report
No Result
View All Result

Scotland’s modern-day plant hunters uncover new species

by Glasgow Report
in Science


SCIENTISTS at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) have worked collaboratively with international partners to describe previously unrecorded species.

Two types of begonia and a rare species of ginger were discovered.

Over the last 12 months, RBGE scientists have combined their work in the Herbarium and research glasshouses in Edinburgh with field research conducted abroad.

The research was carried out in India, Papua New Guinea (PNG) and Malaysia to better understand the needs of habitats in some of the Earth’s most vulnerable biodiversity spots.

Axel Poulsen retrieving ginger seedlings.
The research to identify new species is at the heart of work to understand and prevent biodiversity loss

Southeast Asia is home to 15% of the world’s tropical forests, with its unique habitats at the forefront of the biodiversity crisis.

However, there is a lack of understanding of the region’s diversity, meaning species are in danger of being lost before they are known or their benefits to mankind are fully understood.

With the support of players of People’s Postcode Lottery (PPL), RBGE and its integrated teams collaborated on a two-pronged approach to modern plant hunting.

They combined digital and traditional fieldwork in a bid to better understand the region’s diversity and the threats that they face to support sustainable conservation action.

Dr Mark Hughes, RBGE’s Taxonomy Research Leader (Southeast Asia) worked online with Indian botanist, Dipankar Borah from Goalpara University, India.

They aimed to make the most of Dipankar’s access to the incredibly rich and well-preserved forests of Arunachal Pradesh in Northeast India.

Despite the challenges of working remotely, Dr Hughes and Dipankar were able to use the best of their resources to describe the new species of begonias.

Dr Mark Hughes said: “Assigning scientific names to species is at the core of biodiversity accounting.

“It is only once a species is named that you can truly investigate what its place is within the environment and therefore how mankind can work to use it or protect it.”

Meanwhile, in Papua New Guinea, RBGE’s gingers specialist, Dr Axel Dalberg Poulsen, and colleagues from the PNG Forest Research Institute used a traditional plant hunting approach.

They navigated crocodiles on the Oriomo River, torrential rains and tropical fevers in the hunt for the enigmatic ginger species, Alpinia fusiformis.

The team’s efforts were worthwhile, as Dr Poulsen was able to export seeds from the plants to allow further research, with the young plants now thriving at RBGE.

Helped by Rudolph Valentino Docot, a PhD student from the Philippines, Dr Poulsen confirmed that the species is not in fact Alpina, as it was recorded for the first time in the 1960s.

Research is ongoing to determine the true nature of the species, and Dr Poulsen will be returning to Papua New Guinea this summer to continue the work.

Dr Poulsen said that he hopes the species can “be a new star of the visitor experience” when the Glasshouses reopen to the public after the Edinburgh Biomes refurbishment.

He added: “The business of collecting plants and ‘plant hunting’ is a challenging and exciting one – often navigating dangerous terrain in the name of biodiversity research.

“There is a very strong motivation driving the work.

“Every new discovery could have a significant material impact on global biodiversity loss, which is one of the biggest climate challenges facing the world today.

“With the support of funders such as PPL, and our international partners, these plants are now part of the greater objective in which we play a part.”

PPL has supported RBGE since 2011 when it began supporting the organisation to carry out its mission of engaging local communities around its four Gardens in Scotland.

Since then, the partnership has evolved further to support RBGE with international conservation projects at home and around the world.



Source link

Previous Post

Bancon Homes launches new Aberdeen development

Next Post

‘Forgotten’ food crops work wins Cozzarelli Prize

Related Posts

Eco project sees whisky waste turned into sustainable packaging

by Glasgow Report
August 14, 2025
0

Arbikie Distillery is one of the three collaborators behind the MycoPack project. A NEWLY funded collaboration could see university researchers...

JHI joins £4.25m project for sustainable pesticide alternative

by Glasgow Report
August 7, 2025
0

THE James Hutton Institute has announced its participation in a £4.25m project to develop a sustainable alternative to harmful pesticides....

Study finds weight loss injections could reduce asthma symptoms

Study finds weight loss injections could reduce asthma symptoms

by Glasgow Report
July 31, 2025
0

A NEW study claims that GLP1 agonist drugs, commonly referred to as weight loss injections, may reduce asthma symptoms in...

Next Post
Man stands in field of crops.

‘Forgotten’ food crops work wins Cozzarelli Prize

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Hindenburg Report on Adani Places Mr. Modi in Dilemma

February 10, 2023
Pandora’s Cube: A Mysterious Sum and a Sum of Mysteries

Pandora’s Cube: A Mysterious Sum and a Sum of Mysteries

May 19, 2023
A Brief on Kant’s Knowledge and Duty Reflections for “Glasgow Report”

A Brief on Kant’s Knowledge and Duty: Reflections for “Glasgow Report”

July 19, 2023
Dashcam footage shows impatient motorist yelling at driver in car park

Dashcam footage shows impatient motorist yelling at driver in car park

0
Social media users horrified by video of midges swarming hillwalker

Social media users horrified by video of midges swarming hillwalker

0
Scot horrified after finding poo-covered toilet brush in holiday apartment

Scot horrified after finding poo-covered toilet brush in holiday apartment

0

From Bus to Business: Essex Soft Play Venture Revolutionises the Kids Party Scene

August 28, 2025
Mass deportations, scrapping workers' rights, and buddying up with the Taliban - 23 votes of no confidence in Reform UK's five-year plan

Mass deportations, scrapping workers’ rights, and buddying up with the Taliban – 23 votes of no confidence in Reform UK’s five-year plan

August 28, 2025
This Maga senator's decision to go seatbelt-free in case of carjackings wasn't the health and safety triumph he thought

This Maga senator’s decision to go seatbelt-free in case of carjackings wasn’t the health and safety triumph he thought

August 21, 2025
Glasgow Report

Copyright © 2021 Glasgow Report.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise/Contribute
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Travel
  • Science
  • Real Estate
  • Press Release

Copyright © 2021 Glasgow Report.