The Millennium Seed Bank Project

Gemma Hoyle

Growing Goodenia fascicularis (Goodeniaceae) in controlled-temperature glasshouses, with adequate or limited water availability

After spending a year at the Millennium Seed Bank Project (MSBP) as a Manchester University Biology undergraduate, I happily returned as a graduate. As a member of the Training and technology Section, my role was to investigate some of the ‘problem collections’ in the seed bank i.e. seeds diagnosed with dormancy and requiring very specific dormancy alleviating treatments and germination requirements.

In 2004 I was given the opportunity to carry out a PhD at the University of Queensland (Qld) in Brisbane, Australia, where I have spent the last 3.5 years investigating physiological dormancy of Australian native Goodeniaceae and Asteraceae (herbaceous, non-grassy under-story species, aka forbs). I am particularly interested in the role that south-west Qld’s semi-arid tropical environment plays in regulating dormancy status. For example, I have found that ex situ treatments designed to mimic conditions that seeds experience in situ, post-dispersal and before germination, can effectively alleviate dormancy of some Australian native forbs. In addition, air temperature and soil moisture can affect the dormancy status of Australian seeds while they develop on the parent plant, findings that may enable us to make predictions about the dormancy status of seed collections. 

This work was funded jointly by the Australian Centre for Mining Environmental Research and the MSBP, and it is hoped that findings will contribute to more effective use (in land revegetation projects) and conservation (in ex situ seed banks) of Australian native forbs.

Carrying out this work has given me amazing opportunities to explore the Australian outback, experience living and working overseas, manage my own research and interact with many others contributing to an important global plant conservation effort.

 

Page last updated: 1 April 2008