Orchid Seed Stores for Sustainable Use (OSSSU)

To create and manage a global orchid conservation network to conserve, as seed, species from diverse habitats of varying levels of threat. To utilise biotechnological approaches to re-introduce threatened plants; enhance institutional and country capacity for orchid conservation, and serve as a global access point for integrated orchid conservation programmes.

OSSSU partners at the September 2010 Workshop at Jardín Botánico Lankester in Costa Rica
OSSSU partners at the September 2010 Workshop at Jardín Botánico Lankester in Costa Rica.

Orchid species, estimated at ~25,000 species, represents one of the largest families in the plant kingdom. Their populations extend over all landmasses except Antarctica. Orchids occupy a range of habitats, and have evolved complex relationships with pollinators and symbiotic fungi. These specific life styles, or the habitats they occupy, have lead many to be highly threatened due to climate change, habitat degradation, loss of pollinators and over-collection for their ornamental value or for use in traditional medicine. Concern for the sustainable conservation of this unique germplasm has resulted in the creation of orchid seed banks in countries centring on biodiversity hotspots in Latin America and Asia. Initially funded by a Darwin Initiative programme (Defra; £220 k, 2007-2010 and gift-in-kind contributions of £429K; http://darwin.defra.gov.uk/documents/16012/21706/16-012%20FR%20-%20edited.pdf). The ‘Orchid Seed Stores for Sustainable Use’ (OSSSU) project, managed by Kew staff, started with the primary aim of promoting the development of orchid seed conservation science across sixteen countries in Latin America and Asia. This not only established banking facilities for native species, but promoted and publicised the science underlying the principles of seed storage and orchid conservation in these countries, and the training of young scientists to ensure a legacy for the future. The project is expanding to embrace Research Institutes and Botanic Gardens in over thirty countries and forty institutes engaged in broader aspects of orchid conservation. A principle target is to conserve two thousand species by 2016, of which four hundred could be from China alone.

Orchids produce prodigious numbers of seeds ranging from thousands to millions per fruit, providing ideal targets for the long-term conservation of diverse germplasm and the capacity for large-scale re-introduction following either symbiotic (mycorrhizal fungi) or asymbiotic (complex in vitro media) germination. OSSSU enabled the controlled pollinations of >500 species, the banking at -20°C of >300 species, and the germination on a common (Knudson C) medium of >200 species. This is the first time that such a diverse range of species have been compared under common conditions. Results have shown rapid loss of viability in some Coelogyne species, and how pre-conditioning seeds (Cattleya) with sucrose can improve rapid viability assessment with tetrazolium. Better understanding of lipid biophysics is likely to inform storage strategies (under the Research theme ‘Frozen Planet’), such as the wider application of cryopreservation. It is an intention of the network to exchange pollen and seed between partners to improve the genetic stock of living collections.

Key to the success of the project has been in the level of communication the project has achieved through the promotion of orchid conservation in the participating countries. Such publicity has ensured the leverage of in-country funding, elevated the profile of orchid conservation, and encouraged local collaboration. To date this has been via the cascade training of five technicians, 104 undergraduates, ten master-level staff (including teachers), four PhD students and student exchanges between laboratories. We have published 17 papers and books, nine newsletter articles and more than thirty newspaper and web items. A particular success has been in the translation of “Growing Orchids from Seed” (Seaton and Ramsay, 2009) into Spanish, and its future publication in Chinese. Ready access and exchange of information is being facilitated through a website (www.osssu.org) and a regular newsletter (Orchid Science Letters) launched in 2011. Further outreach of this project is being achieved through charitable bodies. In the UK, this is through knowledge transfer to national collection holders (Plant Heritage), and incorporating them into OSSSU. Internationally, this is through Orchid Conservation International, who are promoting our activities world-wide.

The network continues to expand to include further countries in Latin America and Asia, but also Europe, North America and Africa. Our aim is to construct a Global Orchid Facility on the web with a strong educational focus; a “one stop shop” where members of the network can access information on various topics topics including seed viability, viability testing, storage regimes, germination media and seed capsule maturation times.

Project Team

Science Teams:

Project Leader: Pritchard, Hugh W.

Seed Conservation Department

Prof. HW Pritchard, Dr T Marks, P Seaton, Dr F Hay.

Project Partners and Collaborators

Bolivia

Laboratorio Biotecnologia Biofan

Brazil

UNOESTE Campus II
Centro Politécnico - UFPR

Cayman Islands

National Trust of the Cayman Islands

Chile

Instituto De Investigaciones Agropecuarias
Jardín Botánico Nacional

China

Beijing Botanic Gardens
Hainan University
Huanglong Nature Reserve
Kadoorie Farm and Botanic Garden
Kunming Institute Of Botany
Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden

Colombia

Fundación Jardín Botánico De Cali
La Asociacion Vallecaucana de Orquideología
Vivero Medio Dapa

Costa Rica

Estación Biológica La Selva
Jardín Botánico Lankester

Cuba

Jardín Botánico Orquideario Soroa

Dominican Republic

Jardín Botánico Nacional

Ecuador

Universidad De Cuenca
Jardín Botánico De Quito
Universidad Técnica Particular De Loja

Estonia

Estonian University Of Life Sciences

France

Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (Orchid conservation in West Africa)
Jardin Botanique de la Ville de Lyon

Guatemala

Universidad Del Valle De Guatemala

Hong Kong

Kadoorie Farm & Botanic Garden

Indonesia

Bogor Botanic Garden

India

Botanical Survey of India
National Research Centre for Orchids, Darjeeling and National Bureau of Plant Genetic Resources

Italy

Università Degli Studi Della Tuscia

Jordan

National Center of Agricultural Research and Extension

Mexico

Instituto De Geología, UNAM

Netherlands; St. Eustatius, Dutch Antilles

St. Eustatius National Parks

Panama

Maduro's Tropical Flowers

Peru

Urbanización Los Nogales

Philippines

University Of The Philippines

Singapore

Singapore Botanic Gardens

Spain

Jardí Botànic De Sóller

Taiwan

National Pingtung University of Science and Technology

Thailand

Mahidol University

USA

American Orchid Society (AOS)
Atlanta Botanical Garden
Brooklyn Botanical Gardens

Venezuela

Universidad de Los Andes Mérida-Venezuela

Vietnam

Da Lat Institute Of Biology

Funders

Darwin Initiative, Defra, MSBP, Plant Heritage (gift-in-kind).

Annex Material

Key papers published since 2006:
Hosomi, S.T., Custodio, C.C., Seaton, P.T., Marks, T.R. & Machado-Neto, N.B. (2011) Improved assessment of viability and germination of Cattleya (Orchidaceae) seeds following storage. In Vitro Celleular & Developmental Biology – Plant DOI 10.1007/s11627-011-9404-1 (IF=1.060).

Nadarajan, J., Wood, S., Marks, T.R., Seaton, P.T. & Pritchard, H.W. (2011) Nutritional requirements for in vitro seed germination of 12 terrestrial, lithophytic and epiphytic orchids. Journal of Tropical Forest Science 23: 204-212 (IF=0.500).

Hosomi, S.T., Santos, R.B., Custodio, C.C., Seaton, P.T., Marks, T.R. & Machado-Neto, N.B. (2011) Preconditioning Cattleya seeds to improve the efficacy of the tetrazolium test for viability. Seed Science and Technology 39: 178-189 (IF=0.605).

Seaton, P.T., Hu, H., Perner, H. & Pritchard, H.W. (2010) Ex situ conservation of orchids in a warming world. Botanical Review 72: 193-203 (IF=2.657).

Hay, F.R., Merritt, D.J., Soanes, J.A.A. & Dixon, K.W. (2010) Comparative longevity of Australian orchid (Orchidaceae) seeds under experimental and low temperature storage conditions. Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 164: 26-41 (IF=1.931).

Conferences and workshops:
Major Workshops bringing together the scientists from the collaborating institutes were held at;
• Chengdu, China October 11th – 15th, 2007
• Quito, Ecuador November 7th – 12th, 2007
• San José, Costa Rica September 13th – 17th, 2010

More than thirty other talks or poster presentations at conferences to >1,500 scientists and conservationists, including:

Seaton PT, Marks T, Perner H, Jijon C, Pritchard HW (2007). Orchid seed banking takes off. Second Scientific Conference on Andean Orchids,14-17th November, Loja, Ecuador.

Seaton, P.T. and Prticahrd, H.W. (2009). Orchid Seed Stores for Sustainable Use: a model for future seed-banking activities. Third Scientific Conference on Andean Orchids, 4-8th February, Quito, Ecuador.

Pritchard, H.W. (2010). Sustainable seed supply for orchid horticulture and conservation. 29th Congress of the International Seed Testing Association, 15th-22nd June, Cologne, Germany.

Links:
OSSSU webpage (www.osssu.org)
OSSSU Darwin Initiative final report (http://darwin.defra.gov.uk/documents/16012/21706/16-012%20FR%20-%20edited.pdf)