Abstract
The International Cooperative Biodiversity Groups (ICBG), administered by the Fogarty International Center, was created in 1992. By 2007, the program had completed three cycles of funding. In the last cycle (2003-2008), seven ICBGs were operating in biodiversity hotspots around the world with support from nine Institutes and Centers of the National Institutes of Health and from the National Science Foundation and the US Department of Agriculture. Accomplishments over the history of the program include discovery of numerous bioactive compounds, training of thousands of young scientists in the US and abroad, and the creation and enhancement of biodiversity protected areas around the world. Over the history of the ICBG program plant-based research has been a significant component of many projects. Over 10,000 species of tropical, temperate and arid lands plants from 350 plant families have been analyzed. While some of the research has been guided by ethnobotanical science, particularly science oriented toward botanical medicines, much has been focused around diversity-oriented collections, and some have used ecological principles to identify active compounds. While marine and microbial organisms have grown in importance among the natural products research community, plants will continue to play important roles for the foreseeable future.
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