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Created: Oct 10, 2008

Updated: Aug 28, 2009

Membership: Open

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Created: Jun 20, 2005
Updated: Mar 03, 2009
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Center for Plant Conservation [CPC]

( Non Governmental Organization )

Organization Info   [Edit]

Activities: Activist, Educational
 
Type: Non Governmental Organization
 
Scope: national
 
Website: www.centerforplantconservation...
 
Main Email: cpc [at] mobot.org
 
Contact Name: Kathryn Kennedy, Executive Director
 
Phone: 314-577-9450
 
Fax: 314-577-9465
 
Headquarters: P.O. Box 299
St. Louis, Missouri 63166
United States
 
Staff: 7
 
Local Time: Thu Nov 26 21:45:30
 

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About  [Edit]

The mission of the Center for Plant Conservation is to conserve and restore the rare native plants of the United States.

The Center for Plant Conservation [CPC] is dedicated solely to preventing the extinction of U.S. native plants. The Center was one of the first organizations created to meet this need. The Center is a network of more than 30 leading botanic institutions. Founded in 1984, the Center operates the only coordinated national program of off-site [ex situ] conservation of rare plant material. This conservation collection ensures that material is available for restoration and recovery efforts for these species. The Center also works in research, restoration, technical assistance, education and advocacy through the efforts of the network and the national office.



The cooperative CPC network maintains the National Collection of Endangered Plants. Believed to be the largest living collection of rare plants in the world, the collection contains more than 700 of America’s most imperiled native plants. Live plant material is collected from nature under controlled conditions and then carefully maintained as seed, rooted cuttings or mature plants. Network institutions conduct horticultural research and carefully monitor these materials so that imperiled plants can be grown and returned to natural habitats. Several CPC institutions are also involved in restoration projects in the field [in situ]. Scientists are stabilizing current populations of imperiled plants and reintroducing new populations in appropriate habitats.



These conservation efforts are undertaken to complement other preservation activities for our nation’s flora, such as habitat protection and management. Off-site storage and cultivation of genetically appropriate plant material is a critical step in supporting restoration in the wild. The Center’s goal is to protect the most imperiled U.S. plants from extinction and restore them to secure habitats in cooperation with multiple conservation agencies and organizations.



The Center estimates that about 2,000 U.S. plant species - roughly 10 percent of the country’s entire native flora - are at risk of extinction. Without human intervention, many of these species may be gone within our lifetime. Research by the CPC has shown that 80 percent of the rare plants of the U.S. are closely related to plants with economic value somewhere in the world, and more than 50 percent are related to crop species.

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