Abstract

In May 2014, the first planting of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) conservation hedge took place, when the Reverend Anne Brennan planted a tree which had originated as a cutting from the ancient and historic European yew, Taxus baccata, in the churchyard of her church at Fortingall, Perthshire. This is one of almost 2,000 plants that will eventually form a conservation hedge of significant scientific and conservation value. The International Conifer Conservation Programme (ICCP), based at RBGE, has actively sought other opportunities to establish conservation hedges via its network of ‘safe sites’, using a range of different conifer species. This initiative is being driven by the potential for relatively large numbers of genotypes from a single threatened species to be stored in a linear space. It is well established that seed banks have a great capacity to store large amounts of genetic diversity, so we should simply consider conservation hedges in a similar manner. These super-hedges cram relatively large amounts of genetic material into a small space, capturing a great range of wild traits and potentially contributing to the restoration of wild populations. To date, conservation hedges have been planted at five separate locations at RBGE’s Edinburgh Garden as well as at four ICCP external ‘safe sites’. Although this article focuses on the establishment of conservation hedges using conifers, we have also highlighted some conservation hedges that comprise non-coniferous species.

Highlights

  • If botanic gardens are going to have any valid claim to use their collections as a conservation genetic resource, they need to be more than stamp collections of single individuals

  • Three hedges are at different stages of development using the threatened Chilean endemic Prumnopitys andina (Chilean plum yew). This species has been the subject of field collections since 2003, when Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) collaborated with the Universidad Austral de Chile (UACh) in Valdivia on a Darwin Initiative project concerning the conservation of threatened plants in south and central Chile

  • Hedges can play an invaluable role in the ex situ conservation of biological resources and should be considered as an effective tool in the armoury for those charged with conserving threatened plant species

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Summary

A BST R AC T

In May 2014, the first planting of the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) conservation hedge took place, when the Reverend Anne Brennan planted a tree which had originated as a cutting from the ancient and historic European yew, Taxus baccata, in the churchyard of her church at Fortingall, Perthshire. The International Conifer Conservation Programme (ICCP), based at RBGE, has actively sought other opportunities to establish conservation hedges via its network of ‘safe sites’, using a range of different conifer species. This initiative is being driven by the potential for relatively large numbers of genotypes from a single threatened species to be stored in a linear space. This article focuses on the establishment of conservation hedges using conifers, we have highlighted some conservation hedges that comprise non-coniferous species

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