Current issues in plant cryopreservation and importance for ex situ conservation of threatened Australian native species
Access Status
Authors
Date
2019Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
DOI
ISSN
Faculty
School
Funding and Sponsorship
Collection
Abstract
An alarming proportion of Australia's unique plant biodiversity is under siege from a variety of environmental threats. Options for in situ conservation are becoming increasingly compromised as encroaching land use, climate change and introduced diseases are highly likely to erode sanctuaries regardless of best intentions. Ex situ conservation is currently limited to botanic garden living collections and seed banking, with in vitro and cryopreservation technologies still being developed to address ex situ conservation of species not amenable to conventional storage. Cryopreservation (storage in liquid nitrogen) has been used successfully for long-term biosecure storage of shoot tips of several species of threatened Australian plants. We present a case for building on this research and fostering further development and utilisation of cryopreservation as the best means of capturing critical germplasm collections of Australian species with special storage requirements (e.g. recalcitrant-seeded taxa and species with short-lived seeds) that currently cannot be preserved effectively by other means. This review highlights the major issues in cryopreservation that can limit survival including ice crystal damage and desiccation, toxicity of cryoprotective agents, membrane damage, oxidative stress and mitochondrial function. Progress in understanding and mitigating these stresses is vital for advancing cryopreservation for conservation purposes.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Merritt, D.; Hay, F.; Swarts, N.; Sommerville, K.; Dixon, Kingsley (2014)Premise of research. Orchids are among the most enigmatic of plant species. Yet the Orchidaceae comprises more species at risk of extinction than any other plant family. The collection and storage of orchid germplasm-principally ...
-
Tuckett, R.; Merritt, D.; Hay, F.; Hopper, S.; Dixon, Kingsley (2010)The comparative longevity of seeds of species from the early-angiosperm group, Hydatellaceae, along with other temporary wetland aquatics from the South-west Australian Floristic Region were tested under standard experimental ...
-
Whiteley, S.; Bunn, E.; Menon, A.; Mancera, Ricardo; Turner, S. (2016)Micropropagation and cryopreservation protocols were developed for the threatened Australian species Androcalva perlaria. Vegetative shoots were brought into culture using a simplified surface sterilisation process with ...