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Science and Technology Australia-Aug newsletter, new Phytogen post and another employment opportunity

07 September 2016

Your membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (Year, month, day)

Read the latest Phytogen blog : A moment of great bravery

View a new postdoctoral employment opportunity in plant physiology here.

Science & Technology Australia – August Newsletter
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Dear colleagues,   It’s been a busy month for Science & Technology Australia as we work towards our second Science meets Business and welcome the 45th Parliament of Australia.   I’ve had the privilege over the last month to meet and speak with a number of the leaders of our member organisations. It’s clear there is much passion among our membership for the extraordinary work being done by Australia in science and technology, and a desire to better leverage our networks and connections to ensure issues of importance to the sector are heard, understood and acted on at the highest levels.   To that end, I’ve begun a program of meetings with federal parliamentarians and the business sector as well as leaders in science and technology.   As co-Chair of the National Research and Innovation Alliance along with Professor Les Field of the Australian Academy of Science, I was pleased recently to welcome the Minister for Industry, Innovation and Science, the Hon. Greg Hunt MP. At the Alliance meeting in Canberra last month, Minister Hunt made his first speech in the portfolio about science, announcing a boost to climate science capacity for CSIRO and a new program to foster international collaboration. The Minister invited STA to work with him and his team to help shape the future for science and technology in Australia. We also welcomed the Shadow Minister for Science, Senator the Hon. Kim Carr, who gave generously of his time and also indicated his desire and willingness to work with the sector towards long-term strategic support for Australian science and technology.   I’m also meeting in the early days of Parliament with the former co-convenors of the Parliamentary Friends of Science, who have indicated their keenness to continue to support STEM and build relationships across the sector and politics. And – along with a number of our member organisations – I participated in the Chief Scientist’s stakeholder consultation on the National Research Infrastructure Roadmap. Consultations and submissions close this Friday 9 September.   The Eureka Prizes in Sydney last week highlighted an astonishing range of outstanding work being done across science and technology research, application and public engagement – including by a number of people who are members of STA member organisations. It was an inspiring event and a great reminder of how important it is to tell our stories and celebrate the excellent and life-changing work being done by Australian scientists and technologists every day: warmest congratulations to all finalists and winners. The Eurekas were a fitting epilogue to a very successful National Science Week.   Please do read on for some opportunities to celebrate and further your work, and to build your network: I encourage you to also forward this newsletter to your colleagues and members and encourage them to subscribe for news and opportunities that are relevant to them. I hope to see you soon, and if I haven’t yet had chance to chat with you – please, call or email any time.   Cheers, Kylie

 

Science meets Business 2016 The second annual Science meets Business will take place on October 24 in Melbourne, with a range of outstanding speakers representing politics, industry and research. The Minister for Industry, Innovation and Science, Greg Hunt, Shadow Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research, Senator Kim Carr, Vice-President and Lab Director for IBM Research, Dr Joanna Batstone, and CEO of ANSTO, Dr Adi Paterson are just a few of the speakers who will join us for this forward-looking and engaging day of information, brainstorming and networking.   Member societies are eligible to send two delegates each, so if you are focused on building ties with the private sector, contact your society president to inquire about attending.   We’re grateful to the generous organisations whose support enables us to stage this event at no cost to delegates, including our Major Supporter the Department of Industry, Innovation and Science, and Gold Sponsor, Defence Science and Technology. Sponsorship and partnership opportunities are still available: to inquire, please contact Gia Metherell on 02 6257 2891 or gia.metherell@sta.org.au.

 

 

National Science Week August really is becoming Science Month – more than 1,000 events were held across the nation during this year’s successful National Science Week. Citizen scientists helped to spot endangered animals by trawling through thousands and thousands of wilderness photos, helping to preserve our precious wildlife. Meanwhile, the SCINEMA International Film Festival was held in over 200 community venues: see the winning entries here. National Science Week 2017 will take place is from 12-20 August 2017 – the theme next year is Future Earth.

 

Life & Death As production partner for the Australian Academy of Science’s ‘Science of Life and Death’ national public event series, we are proud to help bring adult science events to five different Australian cities over the next six months. The series kicked off with ‘DEATH in Hobart’ in June and ‘SEX in Melbourne’ in July, both of which were subsequently featured on RN’s Big Ideas. Tickets are now available for the next event in the series: Brisbane – MURDER – 16 September.

 

 

MARS the live experience STA has partnered with the National Geographic Channel and Live on Stage Australia to bring to the stage ‘MARS the live experience’, featuring legendary astronaut, and research leaders from NASA and the European Space Agency. Tickets are now on sale.

 

 

Member News Women in Science AUSTRALIA is holding its first National Symposium on Connecting Women in STEMM on 13-14 September 2016 at RMIT University in Melbourne The Australian Psychological Society is holding their first ever conference with the theme of “United for the Future”. The conference will be held on 13-16 September at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre. The Australasian Society of Clinical and Experimental Pharmacologists and Toxicologists is holding its annual scientific meeting in conjunction the Molecular Pharmacology of G Protein-Coupled Receptors meeting in Melbourne 27-30 November. Registrations for MathsFest Australia 2016 are now open. MathsFest takes place between 28 November and 13 December with nearly 40 international speakers confirmed. The 23rd Australian Statistical Conference 2016 is on in Canberra from 5-9 December 2016. It will be held in conjunction with the 14th Australasian Data Mining Conference and the 9th Australian Conference on Teaching Statistics. The RACI National Centenary Conference 2017 is being held in Melbourne on 23-28 July 2017.

 

Opportunities   Grant applications are now open for the 2017 Science and Innovation Awards for Young People in Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry   Apply to take part in the 2016 Theo Murphy Australian Frontiers of Science – The Microbiome: Exploring the role of microorganism in ecosystem processes and health   Applications to attend the 9th JSPS HOPE Meeting in Tokyo, Japan with Nobel Laureates, are now open   The Women in STEM and Entrepreneurship (WISE) programme is open for applications for funding to support projects for women   Nominations are open for the 2017 Clunies Ross Awards for contributions to the application of technology to benefit Australia Applications are open for early career researchers to attend the 67th Lindau Nobel Laureates Meeting dedicated to Chemistry The Australian Academy of Science is now taking applications for the new Max Day Environmental Science Fellowship Award.
Copyright © 2016 Science & Technology Australia, All rights reserved.

ComBio 2106 program available, scholarship opportunity and GPC Aug e-bulletin

05 September 2016

Your membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (Year, month, day).

New scholarship opportunity available here.

ComBio2016: 3 – 7 October 2016, Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre

ComBio2016 is a combined conference with the ASBMB, ASPS and ANZSCDB

 

We are pleased to advise that the final program is now available for perusal.

 

You can view the program at: http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/program.html

 

There are four separate files which consist of:

 

The one page program timetable.

The full program timetable (9 pages).

The full program (including plenary, symposium and colloquium presentations).

The poster program.

 

All abstracts can also now be viewed at: http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/abstracts.html

 

There are five separate files which consist of:

 

Plenary Abstracts

Symposium Abstracts

Colloquium Abstracts

Poster Abstracts

Author Index

 

The conference app will be available a few days prior to the conference.  The app will include the full program including posters, all abstracts, all companies exhibiting and a list of registrants (less those that have requested privacy).  We will send you a further email when the app is accessible.

 

Please note that registrations are still welcome and also “on site” poster abstract submissions are still welcome up until, and including, Monday 26 September. On site presentations will not be included in the hard copy of the program, on the website or on the conference app, but will be included on the conference program revisions board. On site poster abstracts can be submitted at: https://www.asbmb.org.au/Register/combio2016-abstract-form.cgi

and registrations can be made at: https://www.asbmb.org.au/Register/combio2016-registration-form.cgi

 

If you have difficulty accessing these pages, you should refresh your browser.

 

Kind regards

Sally

 

Sally Jay

ComBio2016 Secretariat

Email:  combio@asbmb.org.au

 

Global Plant Council E-Bulletin August 2016

 

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E-Bulletin /  August 2016
Welcome to your August edition of the monthly Global Plant Council e-Bulletin! As the GPC is holding its Annual General Meeting in October, we’ve been starting to prepare our annual report. Updates from our Member Organizations have been flooding in, and it’s really heartening to read all about the great plant and crop science events and initiatives taking place all over the world. Don’t forget, if you have a plant science event, activity, job, student opportunity, or funding or award scheme that you’d like us to help promote, please just get in touch!  And if you’re looking for a conference to attend, a funding opportunity to apply for, policy documents to read or teaching resources to use, you can find lots of great information on our website, or of course by signing up for Plantae.org, the digital home for plant science on the web. If you’re looking for a new job in plant science, or a PhD position, try searching the hashtag #PlantSciJobs or #PlantSciPhD on Twitter or Facebook for the latest openings.

 

Latest News /  View more… If you have news you would like us to share on our website, please contact lisa@globalplantcouncil.org
This month 62 new breaking news stories were posted on the GPC website including…

In Journal of Experimental Botany: Drought Tolerance in Maize through Altered Root System Architecture JXB‘s Jonathan Ingram highlights a stand-out paper, and associated Insight article, that highlight why ‘steep, cheap and deep’ maize crown roots are best in drought conditions.  In New Phytologist: New Research Shows how Wine Gets its Nose French scientists have discovered a key enzyme that plays a leading role in the formation of the compounds that eventually give wines their sought-after aroma..  In New Phytologist: ‘Superstar’ rice reduces fertilizer loss and cuts pollution Agriculture is one of the biggest drivers of environmental pollution and climate change – yet research in New Phytologist reveals a ‘superstar’ rice variety that uses nitrogen more efficiently, thus reducing pollution caused by run-off.  Sunflowers are on the Clock UC Davis researchers can now explain how sunflowers turn their heads to the sun – it’s all associated with the circadian clock. Discovery in Wheat Turns Half a Century of Plant Biology on its Head Australian scientists have discovered that wheat seeds, as well as leaves, photosynthesize – and what’s more, despite wheat being a C3 plant, they express genes found in the C4 photosynthetic pathway.

 

 

Events /  View more… If you have a conference, meeting, workshop, training course or other event coming up, we can include it in our Events calendar! Please email lisa@globalplantcouncil.org
ComBio 2016 – featuring the Global Plant Council! 03–07 October 2016. Brisbane, Australia.  Enhancing Photosynthesis in Crop Plants: Targets for Improvement 10–11 October 2016. London, UK.  International Symposium on Plant Transformation Biotechnologies 17–19 October 2016. Taipei, Taiwan. Auxin 2016 20–25 October 2016. Haitang Bay, Sanya, China 8th International Symposium on Plant Senescence 31 October–04 November 2016. Jeju, Korea.

 

 

Policy / Lots of new reports, and an archive of useful documents from the last few years, are available on our website. Head to the Resources page and click ‘Reports’.
Beverley Postma Joins HarvestPlus as Chief Executive Officer Beverley Postma, former Executive Director of Food Industry Asia, succeeds World Food Prize 2016 laureate Howarth Bouis as the CEO of HarvestPlus. New Data Examines Landscape of India’s Agricultural Research and Development The International Food Policy Research Institute has released data and a factsheet (PDF) outlining the challenges and opportunities for Indian agricultural research and development.  Climate change: Trade liberalization could buffer economic losses in agriculture Global warming could create substantial economic damage in agriculture, a new study conducted by a team of scientists of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research finds.

 

 

Funding Opportunities / Spotted a funding opportunity we’ve missed? Please tell us about it by emailing lisa@globalplantcouncil.org
Check out our news article here to discover some of the latest funding opportunities for plant scientists from around the world. Thank you to Dr Matthew Hannah from Bayer CropScience for letting us know about two of these grant opportunities! If you know of any others we’ve missed, especially those that may be applicable to scientists outside of Europe and the US, please do get in touch so that we can share them to a wider audience. The Biochemical Society has announced that nominations for its 2018 awards are now open. Of the 13 award categories, 12 are relevant to molecular/biochemical plant and crop scientists, so please click here to find out more.  Please note that the Global Plant Council does not provide funding and is not directly associated with any of the awards we highlight on our website. For more information about individual awards and opportunities, please contact the awarding company or association.

 

 

On the blog /  View more… Would you like to contribute an article to the GPC’s blog? Please get in touch! Email lisa@globalplantcouncil.org
Professor Stefan Jansson on What Makes a GMO, and the Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society Award-winning, guitar-playing Professor Stefan Jansson is President of GPC Member Organization the Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society. We caught up with him to ask about his work, the GM debate, and the GPC.  Uncovering the Secrets of Ancient Barley Dr Nils Stein from the Leibniz Institute of Plant Genetics and Crop Plant Research talks about his headline-making research. Plantwise: Promoting and Supporting Plant Health for the Sustainable Development Goals CABI’s Andrea Powell reveals how the Plantwise food security program is helping to change lives in Africa.  Feeding the World with Virtual Crops Rachel Shekar from the University of Illinois describes how the ‘Crops in silico‘ project aims to link and develop models across biological scales to better predict how plants will respond under climate change.

 

 

Members / 

Click here for details of the GPC Member Societies and Affiliates and their representatives.  Please contact Ruth Bastow (ruth@globalplantcouncil.org) to find out how your organization can join the Global Plant Council. 

 

 

The GPC is a coalition of plant and crop science societies and affiliates from across the globe. The GPC seeks to bring plant scientists together to work synergistically toward solving the pressing problems we face.

Please click here to make a donation via PayPal to help support the GPC.

 

 

Copyright © 2016 Global Plant Council, All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive updates from the Global Plant Council. If you no longer wish to receive the monthly GPC E-Bulletin, or think you have received this email in error, please unsubscribe using the link provided.

The Global Plant Council is a not-for-profit entity registered in Switzerland. Our registered mailing address is: 

Global Plant Council

3rd Floor, Bow House

1a Bow Lane

London, EC4M 9EE

United Kingdom

Add us to your address book

Notification of the 2016 Annual General Meeting of the Australian Society of

26 August 2016

Your membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (year, month, day).

Dear Members of ASPS,

Please be advised that the 2016 Annual General Meeting of the Australian Society of

Plant Scientists will be held 18:15 – 19:15 on Thursday, 6 October, Plaza P2, Brisbane

Convention Centre, Brisbane, Qld. As usual, the ASPS Annual General Meeting has been

scheduled during the COMBIO conference week.

Attached, please find the Preliminary Agenda. If you would like to add any items to the

Agenda, please e-mail these to the Honorary Secretary Martha Ludwig

(martha.ludwig@uwa.edu.au or secretary@asps.org.au), by Wednesday, 15 September

2016.

Sincerely,

John Evans

(President of ASPS)

 

GPC E-Bulletin July 2016

01 August 2016

Your ASPS membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (year, month, day)

 

Global Plant Council E-Bulletin July 2016
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E-Bulletin / 
July 2016
Welcome to another edition of your monthly Global Plant Council e-Bulletin, particularly to any new subscribers that we have met at plant science conferences in recent weeks!

We’d also like to thank and welcome some new GPC supporters – the ARC Centre of Excellence in Plant Energy Biology in Australia has recently become a new Affiliate Member of the GPC, while the Elsevier journals Current Plant Biology and New Negatives in Plant Science have kindly agreed to help sponsor our newsletter. Please do check out the articles our sponsors have provided this month (see below)!

Unfortunately, the good news is overshadowed this week by the very sad news that one of our Executive Board members, Professor Carl Douglas, has died. Many of you, particularly those in the plant cell wall community, may have known Carl, who was a representative to the GPC for the Canadian Society of Plant Biology for a number of years. Carl was a kind, wise and thoughtful man, a brilliant and passionate scientist, and he will be greatly missed. The GPC has paid tribute to Carl on our website.

Latest News / 
View more…

If you have news you would like us to share on our website, please contact lisa@globalplantcouncil.org 





This month 62 new breaking news stories were posted on the GPC website including…

In Journal of Experimental Botany: C4 photosynthesis at 50 – from intrigue to Hall of Fame
JXB‘s Jonathan Ingram highlights two new Darwin Reviews celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Hatch & Slack’s 1966 discovery of C4 photosynthesis. 

From Nature Plants: Learning from the past
This Nature Plants editorial discusses the role of seed banks and other genetic resources for crop breeding and future food security. 

New Phytologist Call for Manuscripts: Special Issue on Plant Volatiles
New Phytologist is currently accepting submissions for a Special collection on Plant volatiles. The journal welcomes submissions of synthetic reviews as well as experimental studies, in all areas and scales of plant science. 

Solving a Plant-Based Rubik’s Cube Puzzle
John Innes Centre scientists have discovered a key “twist” in a Rubik’s cube-like plant puzzle, which could pave the way to new, or more effective pharmaceuticals.

Hidden Moss Chloroplast ‘Wall’ Discovered
Japanese researchers have succeeded in the world’s first visualization of a peptidoglycan ‘wall’ present in the chloroplasts of bryophytes (moss plants). 

Events /
View more…

If you have a conference, meeting, workshop, training course or other event coming up, we can include it in our Events calendar! Please email lisa@globalplantcouncil.org

XXth EUCARPIA General Congress: Plant Breeding: the Art of Bringing Science to Life
29 August–01 September 2016. Zurich, Switzerland. 

GARNet 2016: Innovation in the Plant Sciences
06–07 September 2016. Cardiff, UK. 

10th Tri-National Arabidopsis Meeting
14–16 September 2016. Vienna, Austria.

2nd Asian Horticultural Congress
26–28 September 2016. Chengdu, China.

1st International Symposium on Genomic Selection in Crop Breeding
29–30 September 2016. Rabat, Morocco.

Policy /

Lots of new reports, and an archive of useful documents from the last few years, are available on our website. Head to the Resources page and click ‘Reports’.

BREXIT: The necessity of avoiding the fragmentation of European Science
The European Plant Science Organisation (EPSO) has published an open letter addressing its position on the recent UK referendum decision to leave the European Union.

Set for Success: Climate-proofing the Malabo Declaration (PDF)
This Montpellier Panel briefing paper outlines the need for African governments to unlock the continent’s agriculture sector in a way that captures the synergies between climate adaptation and mitigation and identifies and reduces the inevitable trade-offs.

UK Climate Change Risk Assessment 2017 Synthesis report: priorities for the next five years (PDF)
The Climate Change Act requires the UK Government to compile every five years an assessment of the risks and opportunities arising for the UK from climate change. This document provides a synthesis of the Evidence Report in preparation for the next assessment due in 2017.

Funding Opportunities /

Spotted a funding opportunity we’ve missed? Please tell us about it by emailing lisa@globalplantcouncil.org

We’ve found LOTS of funding opportunities this month, so if you need an injection of cash to support your research, travel or education, take a look at our list here, or browse this Instrumentl list of opportunities.

Congratulations to Drs. Maria Andrade, Robert Mwanga, Jan Low (International Potato Center), and Howarth Bouis (HarvestPlus), who were announced as the 2016 World Food Prize Laureates last month.
More info…

Congratulations are also in order to the UK and Brazil-based scientists who are to receive funding for four collaborative wheat projects, made possible thanks to the BBSRC and Embrapa.
More info…

On the blog / 
View more…

Would you like to contribute an article to the GPC’s blog? Please get in touch! Email lisa@globalplantcouncil.org

How do you grow a plant scientist?
Sarah Blackford, Head of Education and Public Affairs at the Society for Experimental Biology poses a pertinent question – and provides some practical solutions. 

A postcard from the Spanish Society of Plant Physiology
Meet the Global Plant Council’s newest Member Society!

Interview with Laura Lagomarsino, winner of the Ernst Mayr award at Evolution 2016
In this New Phytologist blog post, Mike Whitfield meets Laura Lagomarsino, an evolutionary biologist and botanist who studies the evolution and systematics of Andean flora, and winner of the 2016 Ernst Mayr Award.

Members / 

Click here for details of the GPC Member Societies and Affiliates and their representatives. 

Please contact Ruth Bastow (ruth@globalplantcouncil.org) to find out how your organization can join the Global Plant Council. 

The GPC is a coalition of plant and crop science societies and affiliates from across the globe. The GPC seeks to bring plant scientists together to work synergistically toward solving the pressing problems we face.
Please click here to make a donation via PayPal to help support the GPC.
Copyright © 2016 Global Plant Council, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up to receive updates from the Global Plant Council. If you no longer wish to receive the monthly GPC E-Bulletin, or think you have received this email in error, please unsubscribe using the link provided.
The Global Plant Council is a not-for-profit entity registered in Switzerland.
Our registered mailing address is: 

Global Plant Council

3rd Floor, Bow House
1a Bow Lane

London, EC4M 9EE

United Kingdom

ComBio2016 – Reminder extended early registration deadline is 1 August

31 July 2016

Dear ASPS / ANZSCDB Past and Present Members

ComBio2016: 3 – 7 October 2016 – Brisbane Convention Centre
ComBio2016 is a combined conference of the ASBMB, ASPS and ANZSCDB

A reminder that the extension of the early registration deadline finishes on Monday, 1 August.

The deadline for late poster abstracts is Monday, 15 August (details will be published in the conference program, online and conference App but will be included in “Late Posters” and will not be programmed within themes. So – you can still register on Monday, 1 August (so you pay the early rate) and then submit your abstract by the 15 August deadline for your poster presentation to be published in the program, online and in the conference App. After 15 August, you can still register and submit a poster abstract up until Monday, 26 September but it will be an “On Site” poster presentation – so details will appear on the Program Revisions board and not be published in conference publications.

The program timetable can be downloaded from: http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/timetable.html
and the symposium program from http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/symposia.html
The photographs and bio-sketches of the exciting list of overseas and society plenary lecturers can be downloaded from:
http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/plenary.html

Further Information:
Sally Jay: combio@asbmb.org.au

Global Plant Council is running a lunchtime session at ComBio 2016

26 July 2016

Do not miss “Addressing Global Challenges in Plant Science: the importance of co-operation beyond national boundaries” by @GlobalPlantGPC @ ‪#‎combio2016‬ https://www.asbmb.org.au/…/ComBio2016%20-%20Provisional%20S…

Invitation to support petition by Nobel Laureates

17 July 2016

Your membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (year, month, day).

Dear ASPS members,

I would like to encourage you to add your support to this petition by Nobel Laureates.

Thanks

John Evans, President ASPS

You may have seen the recent news that 110 Nobel laureates have written an open letter to the environmental organization Greenpeace, asking them to consider withdrawing their anti-GMO position, particularly against vitamin A-biofortified Golden Rice.

Professor Channa Prakash of Tuskagee University (USA) has established an online petition to allow scientists and other interested individuals to show their support for this issue. Several representatives of some of the Global Plant Council’s Member Organizations have asked us to circulate the link to this petition, therefore please find it here: http://supportprecisionagriculture.org/join-us_rjr.html.

With thanks and kind regards,

Lisa
GPC Outreach & Communications Manager
lisa@globalplantcouncil.org 

ComBio2016 – extension of poster submission deadline‏

29 June 2016

Dear past and present ASPS members,

ComBio2016 – 3 – 7 October 2016: Brisbane Convention and Exhibition Centre
ComBio2016 incorporates the annual meetings of the ASBMB, ASPS and ANZSCDB.
 
The official abstract submission deadline has now passed. Invited abstract submission remains open, but oral requests have now closed. The ComBio2016 Program Committee is pleased to advise that the poster abstract submission deadline has been extended as follows:
 
Poster abstracts will be programmed within themes if received by Monday, 25 July and details published in the conference program, conference App and on the website.
 
Poster abstracts will be programmed in Late Posters if received by Monday, 15 August and details published in the conference program, conference App and on the website (but will not be programmed within themes). 
 
Poster abstracts will be programmed as On Site Posters on the program revisions board at the conference if received by Monday, 26 September. The poster presentation details will not be published in the conference program, conference App or on the website.
 
Abstracts can be submitted at: https://www.asbmb.org.au/cgi-bin/combio2016-abstract-form.cgi
 
Registrations are welcome and can be made at: https://www.asbmb.org.au/cgi-bin/combio2016-registration-form.cgi
 
Please note that you need to register prior to submitting an abstract. The earlybird fee has now closed.
 
The provisional symposium schedule and timetable can be downloaded from: http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/symposia.html and http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/timetable.html
The plenary speaker bio-sketches and photographs can be viewed at: http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/plenary.html
 
 
Further information:
Sally Jay
combio@asbmb.org.au

Employment opportunities and ComBio2016 early bird registration due 27th June.

21 June 2016

Your membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (year, month, day).

There are new plant science employment opportunities in Melbourne and Perth.

ComBio2016: 3-7 October 2016 – Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre
ComBio2016 is a combination of the ASBMB, ASPS and ANZSCDB Annual Meetings
A reminder that the Early Registration & Abstract Deadline is Monday, 27 June 2016
Dear ASPS / ANZSCDB Past and Present Members
A reminder that the early registration and abstract submission deadline is on Monday, 27 June.
Online registration and abstract submission is open and you can register at:
http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/registration.html
and submit your abstract at:
http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/abstracts.html
Please note that you need to register prior to submitting your abstract.
The provisional program timetable and the provisional symposium schedule can be accessed from http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/timetable.html and http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/symposia.html respectively.
The plenary speakers and their photographs and bio-sketches can be accessed from: http://www.asbmb.org.au/combio2016/plenary.html
Further information:  Sally Jay:  combio@asbmb.org.au

Student travel awards due this Fri, new summit and job post and May GPC e-bulletin

06 June 2016

Your membership is paid to [wpmlfield name=”paidtodate”] (year, month, day).

Hello ASPS members,

Just a reminder that ASPS student travel grant applications close this Friday June 10th.

The 2nd Global Summit on Plant Science has been added to the ASPS events page.

A new employment opportunity in Canberra has just been posted the ASPS site. Click here for further details.

Global Plant Council E-Bulletin May 2016
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E-Bulletin / 
May 2016
Welcome to the May edition of your Global Plant Council e-bulletin, which contains a round-up of highlights from the plant science community around the world in the last month.

We are excited to say that the Spanish Society for Plant Physiology (Sociedad Española de Fisiología Vegetal; SEFV) has recently joined the GPC as a Member Society, so ¡hola! to all our new members!

As well as Society Members, we now also accept ‘Affiliate’ research institutions and organizations to join the Global Plant Council. We are delighted to welcome The Center for Plant Aging Research at the Institute for Basic Science in South Korea, and the Max Planck Institute for Molecular Plant Physiology in Golm, Germany, as our first two Affiliate Members.

If you would like to know more about becoming a Society Member or an Affiliate Member of the GPC, please get in touch with us!

Latest News / 
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If you have news you would like us to share on our website, please contact lisa@globalplantcouncil.org 


This month 62 new breaking news stories were posted on the GPC website including…

From New Phytologist: The 37th New Phytologist Symposium: Plant developmental evolution
Sarah Lennon, New Phytologist’s Managing Editor, provides an overview of this recent plant ‘evo-devo’ symposium, held in Beijing, China, 15–19th May 2016.

In Nature Plants: Mechanism discovered for plants to regulate their flowering in a warming world
Researchers from Australia’s Monash University have discovered a new mechanism that enables plants to regulate their flowering in response to raised temperatures.

From Journal of Experimental Botany: Latest thinking on photorespiration for crop improvement
The Journal of Experimental Botany delves deep into “the photorespiration problem” with a new Special Issue featuring in depth reviews, opinion pieces and original research. 

From the GPC Community…
Strengthening the cooperation between Argentinian and German plant science for phenotyping and bioeconomy
Roland Pieruschka provides an update on links between the Latin-American Plant Phenotyping Network and its European counterparts.

Events /
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If you have a conference, meeting, workshop, training course or other event coming up, we can include it in our Events calendar! Please email lisa@globalplantcouncil.org

Scandinavian Plant Physiology Society PhD Student Conference
21–23 June 2016. Oslo, Norway. 

EPSO/FESPB Plant Biology Europe 2016
26–30 June 2016. Prague, Czech Republic. 

International Conference on Arabidopsis Research 2016
29 June–3 July 2016. Gyeongju, Korea. 

Society for Experimental Biology Annual Main Meeting
4–7 July 2016. Brighton, UK. 

ASPB Plant Biology 2016
9–13 July 2016. Austin, Texas, USA

Reports /

Lots of new reports, and an archive of useful documents from the last few years, are available on our website. Head to the Resources page and click ‘Reports’.

Lots of new reports were published this month – here are a few but don’t forget to check out the Reports section of our Resources page for more!

Growing Food for Growing Cities: Transforming Food Systems in an Urbanizing World
This report by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs highlights the problems of feeding a growing – and increasingly urbanized – human population, and makes recommendations for strategies that could help. 
More…

The State of the World’s Plants
The Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew (London, UK) has released the first ever global assessment of current knowledge on the diversity of plants on earth, the threats these plants face, and the effectiveness of policies to deal with these threats.
More…

Genetically Engineered Crops: Experiences and Prospects
A detailed and extensive study carried out by the US National Academy of Sciences reports that GM crops are safe to eat, and that new technologies in genetic engineering and conventional plant breeding are blurring the once clear distinctions between these two crop improvement approaches.
More…

Funding Opportunities /

Spotted a funding opportunity we’ve missed? Please tell us about it by emailing lisa@globalplantcouncil.org

Calls for several funding opportunities have been made in the past few weeks – this article on our website gives you a bit of information about some of these: Global Challenges Research Fund, Newton Fund Agri-Food Competition, Agri-Innovation Den, Validation of diagnostic tools for animal and plant health (Horizon 2020), BBSRC LINK funding and Industrial Partnership Awards, Hello Tomorrow Challenge, and African Union Research Grants.
More…

Read this article to find out more about the Innovation Challenge for Cassava.
More…

There is no monetary prize for this one, but the FAO’s World Food Day Poster and Video Contest looks like a fantastic opportunity to engage children and young people on the subjects of climate change and sustainable agriculture and food production!

Finally, congratulations to the 15 recipients of an ASPB Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) to support them during a 10-week plant science summer project – a fantastic opportunity for the next generation of plant scientists!

On the blog / 
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Would you like to contribute an article to the GPC’s blog? Please get in touch! Email lisa@globalplantcouncil.org

Choosing your growth media for plant science
In light of a new paper from the University of Bristol, Sarah Jose reports on the effects that growth media can have on Arabidopsis. 
More…

Underutilized crops and insects replace fishmeal in aquaculture feed
In a guest post from scientists with the FishPLUS project, Crops for the Future discuss efforts to improve the sustainability of fish farming using fishmeal made from insect larvae that are fed on underutilized crops. 
More…

Round-up of Fascination of Plants Day 2016
May 22nd was International Fascination of Plants Day – Sarah Jose provides a social media-round-up in case you missed it! 
More…

The flower breeders who sold X-ray lilies and atomic marigolds
This repost from The Conversation magazine discusses the science behind some of the more unusual flowers you might find on display at this year’s Royal Horticultural Society’s Chelsea Flower Show. 
More…

Members / 

Click here for details of the GPC Member Societies and Affiliates and their representatives. 

Please contact Ruth Bastow (ruth@globalplantcouncil.org) to find out how your organization can join the Global Plant Council. 

The GPC is a coalition of plant and crop science societies and affiliates from across the globe. The GPC seeks to bring plant scientists together to work synergistically toward solving the pressing problems we face.
Please click here to make a donation via PayPal to help support the GPC.
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