News

Industries

Companies

Jobs

Events

People

Video

Audio

Galleries

My Biz

Submit content

My Account

Advertise

South Africa

Subscribe & Follow

Advertise your job vacancies
Search jobs

Toyota Enviro Outreach scientists discover new species of plant

Scientists and students from the University of Johannesburg, the South African National Biodiversity Institute, University of Pretoria and University of Cape Town recently visited several floristically interesting sites in the arid Gariep and Upper Nama-Karoo regions of the Northern Cape.
Toyota Enviro Outreach scientists discover new species of plant

Highlight of the 2013 Toyota Enviro Outreach, the fifth in the annual scientific study programme that seeks to safeguard South Africa's natural wealth and reduce biodiversity loss, was the discovery of a rare species of plant last seen seven years ago.

Their common purpose was to document and DNA barcode the flora of the region and during their visit they collected more than 500 individual plants representing 400 species. They found a few plants they did not expect, like the new species of Trachyandra discovered in the Gamsberg Mountains near Aggenys and Eragrostis sarmentosa, collected at Raap en Skraap, which is the first distribution record for this species in the area.

Not previously recognised

When the tiny Trachyandra bulb was first discovered in 2006 there were no photographs taken or samples gathered to support the finding. Consequently, it could not be recognised as a new species. The sample gathered during Toyota's Enviro Outreach will now be used to confirm the authenticity of the new species and this will be added to the 100 or more new species found annually in South Africa.

"It will be exciting to follow the classification process and to know that Toyota Enviro Outreach played a significant role in this achievement," said Professor Michelle van der Bank of the African Centre for DNA Barcoding (ACDB) in the Department of Botany and Biotechnology at the University of Johannesburg, who was the lead scientist on the project. The team of scientists will now spend the next few months sorting, identifying and DNA barcoding their plant collections.

The project forms part of the International Barcode of Life Project (iBOL). All the data generated will be uploaded on to the Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD), an online informatics platform, where it will become part of a growing reference library of DNA barcodes for South African plants and animals that will be freely available for use by the broader scientific and amateur naturalist communities.

Let's do Biz