@article{ef6abcb09e164697af9aef20aa3c8d69,
title = "Center for Plant Conservation's Best Practice Guidelines for the reintroduction of rare plants",
abstract = "Recent estimates indicate that one-fifth of botanical species worldwide are considered at risk of becoming extinct in the wild. One available strategy for conserving many rare plant species is reintroduction, which holds much promise especially when carefully planned by following guidelines and when monitored long-term. We review the Center for Plant Conservation Best Reintroduction Practice Guidelines and highlight important components for planning plant reintroductions. Before attempting reintroductions practitioners should justify them, should consider alternative conservation strategies, understand threats, and ensure that these threats are absent from any recipient site. Planning a reintroduction requires considering legal and logistic parameters as well as target species and recipient site attributes. Carefully selecting the genetic composition of founders, founder population size, and recipient site will influence establishment and population growth. Whenever possible practitioners should conduct reintroductions as experiments and publish results. To document whether populations are sustainable will require long-term monitoring for decades, therefore planning an appropriate monitoring technique for the taxon must consider current and future needs. Botanical gardens can play a leading role in developing the science and practice of plant reintroduction.",
keywords = "Founders, Genetics, Managed relocation, Monitoring, Optimal site selection, Reintroduction",
author = "Joyce Maschinski and Albrecht, {Matthew A.}",
note = "Funding Information: For extending the invitation to present at the IABG conference JM thanks Dr. Ren Hai, Guangzhou Botanic Garden, and the reintroduction session organizers Dr. Hong Liu, Florida International University and Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden and Dr. Jiangyun Gao, Xishuangbanna Botanic Garden. Guangxi Chairman's Foundation grant #09203-04 to Hong Liu and colleagues supported JM attendance at the IABG conference possible. JM thanks her hosts Dr. Weibang Sun, Kunming Botanic Garden and Dr. Jiangyun Gao, Xishuangbanna Botanic Garden for kindly allowing her opportunities to learn about their ongoing reintroduction research in China. Reintroductions conducted at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden and at The Arboretum at Flagstaff have been made possible through funding from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ( 1448-40181-99-G-173 ), Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services ( #20161,021010,022647 ), Miami-Dade County Natural Areas Management and Environmentally Endangered Lands Program ( R-808-07 ), Arizona Department of Transportation , U.S. Forest Service and U.S. National Park Service . JM thanks current and past staff members and volunteers who helped implement many of these reintroductions: Sam Wright, Jennifer Possley, Devon Powell, Stephen Hodges, Julissa Roncal, Kristie Wendelberger, Sheila Murray, Jan Busco, and Rob Campbell and to her CPC conservation colleagues for sharing their inspiring reintroduction stories, which have been the foundation of her professional growth and development. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1016/j.pld.2017.09.006",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "390--395",
journal = "Plant Diversity",
issn = "2096-2703",
number = "6",
}