building capacity for plant biodiversity inventory and conservation in nepal

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Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal RONAST

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Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal. RONAST. Flora of Nepal. 6500-7000 spp. Enumeration completed 1982. Collaborative project to write Flora with centres in: Edinburgh Kathmandu Tokyo London (Natural History Museum). Estimated timescale 15 years. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

RONAST

Page 2: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal
Page 3: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

Flora of Nepal• 6500-7000 spp.

• Enumeration completed 1982.

• Collaborative project to write Flora with centres in: – Edinburgh– Kathmandu– Tokyo– London (Natural History Museum).

• Estimated timescale 15 years.

Page 4: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

Project aims

• Strengthen capacity for taxonomy (especially staff and collections at DPR and TU).

• Train 18 Nepalese scientists in data recording, plant collection, and conservation status assessment.

Page 5: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

RONAST - Royal Nepal Academy of Science and Technology

Page 6: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

DPR - Department of Plant Resources

Page 7: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

TU - Central Department of Botany, Tribhuvan University

Page 8: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

Project activities• 3 training workshops.

• 1 field trip (3 in total).

• Preparation of Flora account

• 1 visit to UK

Page 9: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

16 Darwin Scholars

• Institutional nominations– 2 RONAST– 4 DPR– 4 TU

• Open competition– 2 Freelance– 2 TU– 1 Natural History Museum– 1 DPR

Page 10: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

Challenges• Relationship among partner institutions has not been

close historically.• Communication – broadband internet links poor.• Resources – herbarium needs much curation, library

poor, infrastructure poor, bad microscopes.• Access to herbarium problematic to non DPR staff.• Cultural problems – books and equipment may be kept in

director’s office as status symbol.• Access to computers limited.• No funds to pay for shipping loans.• No money for staff to visit foreign herbaria.• Need to maintain progress and momentum.• Poor career opportunities for junior botanists.• Complex bureaucracy slows implementation.

Page 11: Building Capacity for Plant Biodiversity Inventory and Conservation in Nepal

Lessons• Clarity is required during initial meetings• Relationships take a long time to develop – there is no

substitute for face to face meetings.• High level access to government via RONAST creates

high profile project. • NGOs assist in raising profile of project. • Nomination / selection procedure.• Task-orientated learning. • 1 to 1 training. • British Embassy and British Council. • Institutions are not monolithic.• Be sensitive to financial limitations of participants.• Good to have dedicated fund-raising department in UK. • Buy your own data projector.

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Taxonomy and monitoring of species: building capacity to support CBD information needs

1. What are some of the needs of host countries in terms of taxonomy and monitoring of species. Where are the biggest gaps?

2. Could these needs be better identified? GTI needs assessments?

3. What are the strengths and opportunities in Darwin Initiative in supporting taxonomic capacity in developing countries?

4. What are the barriers and obstacles to the Darwin Initiative in the above?

5. Could Darwin Initiative collaborative more closely with existing global and regional taxonomy and information initiatives e.g. GBIF; to deliver more benefits?

6. What aspects of biodiversity policy are key to support the development of taxonomic studies and monitoring of species in host countries?