You are here: Home » News-CM » Economy » News
Business Standard

MoU Signed between Botanical Survey of India and Natural History Museum, UK

Capital Market 

(BSI) and (NHM), UK signed a Memorandum of Understanding for cooperation in the field of genetic/taxonomic studies, research and training, conservation in India, including species and habitat conservation assessments, etc here today.

The MoU was signed by Director, Dr and of the Algae, Fungi and Plants Division, NHM, Dr Sandra Knapp, in the presence of for Environment, Forest & Climate Change, Dr

The MoU will pave the way for staff to work in Natural History Museum, and vice-versa and they will share fairly and equitably the benefits that may arise from the collection, study and conservation of the plant materials such as seeds, specimens and tissue samples and exchange associated data and images. will help in in areas of systematic botany and long-term conservation of plant genetic resources in

Botanical research has a long history in India, and modern scientific institutions have developed over two centuries. The collection of Indian plants held in UK institutions, together with India's own tremendous collections, are an invaluable resource for modern Indian botanical science.

Collections, digitisation and study by Indian scientists will make these openly available for wider scientific use in in areas such as biodiversity conservation, environmental protection, and preservation of plant resources for use in traditional by rural communities.

Lakhs of specimens of Indian plants are located in the in London, and a renewed partnership with the is creating digital images of these specimens to make them available to Indian science. Three staff members of have received Rutherford Fellowships (funded by the UK government's Department for Business, - BEIS) to undertake this important work in They have received training in all aspects of digitisation and curation, and have already imaged some 16,000 sheets in plant families that are essential to crop science and At the same time two botanists from are working in herbaria throughout the country, identifying specimens, capacity building, interacting with young Indian taxonomists and exchanging ideas.

This open science and collaboration is a core goal of both and Natural History Museum, signing of the Memorandum of Understanding between and is set to develop further to the benefit of both and the UK. Both countries are committed to the use of scientific evidence to support the goals of the Convention on Biological Diversity, CITES and the Protocol - this MOU will enable research that will underpin these national responsibilities.

and scientific exchange between and the UK will also be central to future work under the Memorandum of Understanding and will enable learning from each other and work collaboratively to address important scientific questions and deliver benefit to humanity.

Powered by Capital Market - Live News

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, February 17 2018. 13:36 IST
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU
RECOMMENDED FOR YOU