Orchid Conservation in Peru: The Need for Taxonomists to Assist Local Authorities with Plant Identification
PDF

Keywords

deforestation
slash and burn agriculture
ex-situ propagation
in-vitro culture

How to Cite

Fernandez, R. (2005). Orchid Conservation in Peru: The Need for Taxonomists to Assist Local Authorities with Plant Identification. Selbyana, 26(1/2), 335. Retrieved from https://journals.flvc.org/selbyana/article/view/121448

Abstract

Peru has ca. 2500 species of orchids and a deforestation rate of 300,000 ha per year. Local authorities need help from taxonomists in recognizing and identifying orchids and other plant species if they are to control over-collecting in the wild and plant smuggling, both illegal in Peru. Illegal orchid greenhouses register with the government and operate as if legitimate. More accredited laboratories are needed to propagate native orchids by in-vitro culture. Many of Peru's orchid species are new to science, and if conservation is not practiced, many will only be known by their herbarium specimens.

PDF

Open Access and Copyright Notice

 

Selbyana is committed to real and immediate open access for academic work. All of Selbyana's articles and reviews are free to access immediately upon publication. There are no author charges (APCs) prior to publication, and no charges for readers to download articles and reviews for their own scholarly use.  To facilitate this, Selbyana depends on the financial backing of the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens, the hard work and dedication of its editorial team and advisory board, and the continuing support of its network of peer reviewers and partner institutions.

Authors are free to choose which open license they would like to use for their work. Our default license is the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 (CC BY-NC 4.0). While Selbyana’s articles can be copied by anyone for noncommercial purposes if proper credit is given, all materials are published under an open-access license with authors retaining full and permanent ownership of their work. The author grants Selbyana a perpetual, non-exclusive right to publish the work and to include it in other aggregations and indexes to achieve broader impact and visibility.

Authors are responsible for and required to ascertain that they are in possession of image rights for any and all photographs, illustrations, and figures included in their work or to obtain publication or reproduction rights from the rights holders. Contents of the journal will be registered with the Directory of Open Access Journals and similar repositories. Authors are encouraged to store their work elsewhere, for instance in institutional repositories or personal websites, including commercial sites such as academia.edu, to increase circulation (see The Effects of Open Access).