Affiliation:
1. Missouri Botanical Garden St. Louis MO 63017‐8402 USA
2. Research Center for Eco‐Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing 100085 China
3. Botanic Gardens Conservation International Richmond TW9 3BW UK
4. Global Footprint Network Oakland CA 94612 USA
Abstract
AbstractAt the XIX International Botanical Congress held in Shenzhen, China, in July 2017, the delegates unanimously adopted the Shenzhen Declaration on Plant Sciences in an effort to accelerate the contributions made by plant scientists for the benefit of the world′s changing society. This paper discusses what has been accomplished concerning plant conservation since the Shenzhen Declaration. Beyond the problems we faced in 2017, the global Covid pandemic and the war have presented new challenges. With the massive ecological overshoot, the number of malnourished people globally has increased. Most threats to vascular plants have increased generally over these 6 years, while the responses of the botanical community to them have continued to proceed at a relatively slow pace. Although international cooperation is needed to combat the grave challenges we face, the ease of such collaboration has decreased substantially in recent years. Certainly, rapid deforestation, especially in the tropics, and our ineffective approaches to mitigate climate change will lessen the effectiveness of our strategies to slow extinction. Indeed, our blindness to the reality of ecological overshoot and misperceptions concerning sustainability are accelerating extinction and thus destabilizing social structures and civilization. As an example, conservation in China faces serious challenges with biodiversity loss, but botanical gardens and seed banks there offer hope on ex situ conservation. The botanical and other scientific communities can contribute by drawing the attention of fellow citizens to the gravity of the problems that we face and by being actively engaged in providing solutions and carrying them forward to action.
Subject
Plant Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Reference38 articles.
1. Defending Earth’s terrestrial microbiome
2. Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI).2021. State of the world′s trees. Richmond: BGCI [online]. Available fromhttps://www.bgci.org/wp/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/FINAL-GTAReportMedRes-1.pdf
3. Botanic Gardens Conservation International (BGCI).2023. Global tree portal. Botanic Gardens Conservation International [online]. Available fromhttps://www.bgci.org/resources/bgci-databases/globaltree-portal/
4. Plant Diversity Conservation Challenges and Prospects—The Perspective of Botanic Gardens and the Millennium Seed Bank
5. CarveyN.2023. Royal Botanic Gardens Kew personal communication of unpublished data.