June 1, 1999
Contact: Chris Curran
513-556-1806
chris.curran@uc.edu
BIOLOGISTS WORK TO PRESERVE RAINFOREST'S ENDANGERED PLANTS
Cincinnati --University of Cincinnati biology faculty Susan
Dunford and Valerie Pence and former biology graduate student
Bernadette Plair recently returned from an expedition to the
rainforests of Costa Rica where they experimented with new
techniques to collect and preserve tropical plants.
Pence and Plair have been working for the last several years
to develop more effective techniques to collect endangered
plants. Their previous field sites have been in Plair's homeland
of Trinidad, and much of the laboratory work is done at the
Cincinnnati Zoo and Botanical Garden's Center for Research of
Endangered Wildlife (CREW). Pence is head of the Plant
Conservation Division at CREW and an adjunct faculty member at
UC. Plair is now a researcher at CREW.
This spring, they tried out their methods at the La Selva
preserve in Costa Rica run by the Organization of Tropical
Studies. The techniques are designed to be fast, simple, and not
harmful to the living plants. So, they use a basic hole-puncher
to retrieve tiny samples of cells and tissues from plants which
are then carted back to the lab in tiny vials of culture medium
to be grown into whole new plants.
Dunford joined the group to look specifically at how to
protect plant tissues during the dehydration, freezing, and
rehydration that is used in the collection and preservation of
some plant tissues.
"A lot of the damage is done on rehydration," explained
Dunford. "The cell membranes get disrupted as it dries, and you
find the holes when you rehydrate."
Fortunately, most plants know how to protect themselves
naturally during dry times. They secrete a hormone called
abscisic acid or ABA. ABA triggers a chain of events, including
the accumulation of sugars and proteins which protect the cell
membranes during drying.
If the UC and CREW biologists can find a way to utilize and
enhance the plant's natural defenses against drying, it should
improve the survivability of the plant samples they collect.
Dunford, who normally conducts plant physiology experiments in
the laboratory, said she was awed by the beauty of the tropical
rainforest and a bit intimidated by the non-plant wildlife. "The
trees were amazing. I saw agoutis and lots of birds, but they
have venomous snakes and other critters. I wish I had taken a
bigger flashlight!" she joked.
Fortunately, the snakes stayed out of the researchers' way,
and they were able to finish their field work on time despite
heavy rains during most of their visit. They should know sometime
this summer how many of their plant samples survived.
All of the experimental work was done on plant species which
are not endangered. Thirty species were collected in all ranging
from tiny bryophytes to the flowering Piper plant. The research
was funded by the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden with
private funding from Professor Dunford.
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