Plant conservation efforts supported by Scottish and Vietnamese partnership
International efforts to save the rich flora of Vietnam have been strengthened, following the renewal of a partnership between the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh and two of the Southeast Asian country’s renowned scientific institutes.
Supported by the Stanley Smith Trust, senior botanists from the Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources (IEBR) and the Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology (VAST) recently visited the Edinburgh Garden to sign the third Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), paving the way to closer links between the three organisations.
The Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh has worked with partners in Vietnam since the mid twentieth century and, in recent years, teams from the Scottish research institute’s Logan Botanic Garden have joined local experts on expeditions to the remote Hoang Lien mountain range in North West Vietnam. In this biodiversity hotspot, new species such as Rhododendron tephropeploides have been scientifically named by the team for the first time.
Simon Milne MBE, Regius Keeper of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh said: “At a time when 40 per cent of the world’s plants are in danger, global partnerships can really make a huge difference in securing the future of endangered plant species.
“By working together to collect, study and record plant specimens, develop conservation programmes and share training and research opportunities, we can slow or even halt the extinction of many of the world’s fascina
Richard Baines, Curator at Logan Botanic Garden, part of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh, added: “The partnership provides us with a crucial opportunity to secure species in cultivation, giving them the chance to survive threats such as encroaching agriculture, logging and the effects of climate change, which are all happening right now.
“The recent expansion of cardamom farming in the area is a real problem. Our fieldwork in 2014 showed that there were 10 separate species of rhododendron in the locale. On our next trip, there were only three and last year, we were shocked to find none.
“Species of wild origin, that are not cultivated, are becoming more and more fragmented and yet, we are still finding plants that were previously unknown to science. Finding and recording plants is the very first step in protecting biodiversity, but many species are being lost before they are even named by science.”
As part of the new agreement, the partners are also planning to write the world’s first field guide on the Flora of the Hoang Lien mountains, helping to identify, name and conserve plants from this biodiverse region.
Visitors have a chance to see Rhododendron tephropeploides and other species which have only recently been named by science at Logan Botanic Garden in Dumfries & Galloway. Known as Scotland’s most exotic Garden, Logan enjoys an almost subtropical climate thanks to the Gulf Steam, enabling plants from Australasia, Central and South America and Southern Africa to thrive. The Garden’s summer season ends on October 31 and will reopen on March 1, 2025.