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Global Plant Council survey

31 October 2018
Global Plant Council E-Bulletin October 2018

 

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Survey/ 
October 2018.
GPC Survey

Help us shape the future of the Global Plant Council!

The GPC has launched a (very short) poll addressed to all kinds of plant/crop/environmental and agricultural researchers.

The aim of the survey is to learn the needs of the plant science community and help the GPC to understand the extent to which the community appreciates the benefits of being actively involved in the council. This knowledge will allow the GPC  to increase the effectiveness of its activities in the future.

Only 9 questions, will demand just 5 min of your time.

Link: https://goo.gl/Xj8QT5.

 

 

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 isabel@globalplantcouncil.org

*GPC workshop* – Enhancing Global Collaborations in Crop Science
04 November 2018. Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

ASA CSSA meeting: Enhancing productivity in a changing climate
04–07 November 2018. Baltimore, Maryland, USA.

XXXII Argentinian Meeting of Plant Physiology (RAFV) and XV Latin American Congress of Plant Physiology
11–15 November 2018. Córdoba, Argentina.

 

Members / 

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

Please contact us (isabel@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 institutions 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 © 2018 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 Canada.
Our registered mailing address is: 

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ASPS AGM tomorrow!

25 September 2018

REMINDER:

 

For all those attending COMBIO 2018 this is a reminder that the ASPS AGM 2018 will be held in Room C2.2 at 12.55-1.55pm Wednesday 26th September.

 

Thanks,

 Matt Gilliham

 

ComBio ASPS dinner

16 September 2018

Dear ASPS member,

This is a remainder for our annual society dinner registration, the ASPS dinner at ComBio2018 on Tuesday, 25th September.

We are happy to extend the registration till Friday, 21st September as many of you showed interest to attend the dinner. We have very limited tickets, so please confirm your spot by doing EFT before Friday, 21st September.

For details, please follow our earlier email copied below.

We looking forward to see you all at ASPS dinner at ComBio2018

Warm regards,

ASPS Dinner Organising Committee

 

 

 

 

ASPS dinner at ComBio2018

 

ASPS dinner at ComBio2018

Dear ASPS member,

We hope to see you at the coming ComBio2018 in our spectacular city of Sydney.

If so, you might be interested to attend a dinner where you can discuss collaborative research and networking sitting with fellow scientists while enjoying magnificent Darling Harbour views with delicious food at a very affordable price!

We are organising this year’s ASPS dinner which will be held on Tuesday, 25th September at Zaaffran Restaurant. (https://www.zaaffran.com/). You can sit and enjoy this harbourside restaurant where you will be amused by a marvellous Darling Harbour night view. It just a three minute harbour side walk from the ComBio2018 conference centre.   It is well worth a visit, so come along to refresh your mind after a long day full of scientific sessions and enjoy some good food and company.

This year the menu will be a three course Indian dinner with open bar with juice, soft drinks, red and white wine. We are offering you a high standard dinner at a very reasonable price, thanks to ASPS for the subsidy. The cost per ticket will be:

  • Students: $30
  • Academics and guests: $60

You can book your spot by emailing Kamal (kamal.uddin@sydney.edu.au) who will reply to you shortly, with the payment details and confirm your reservation after payment. Don’t forget to mention any dietary requirement in your email during booking.

For catering purposes we need to know the numbers in advance. So, if you really want to attend the ASPS dinner, please reserve your place and make your payment before Friday, 14th September.

We only have a limited number of tickets, so please don’t wait for the last moment to book your spot.

We looking forward to see you all at ComBio2018.

 

Warm regards,

ASPS Dinner Organising Committee

 

Count down to 60 years of ASPS – The beginning

14 August 2018
ASPS 60

Count down to 60 years of ASPS

Dear ASPS members,

with about 6 weeks until ComBio 2018, make sure you check the website for a new post to Phytogen each Monday. This beginning post has been emailed to start you off and will be on our website after that (https://www.asps.org.au/)

The posts will be :

Tuesday 14th August — The beginning

Monday 20th August — Thoughts from some of our leaders

Monday 27th August — Rewarding excellence

Monday 3rd September — Growing up within ASPS

Monday 10th September — Plants in Action

Monday 17th September — Why we need more women

we hope you will enjoy reading, hint: after this coming Monday’s post, you will be able to like on our Societies facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/ASPSozplants) post a pebble if you like and that will feed through to twitter also, Kind Regards, the ASPS Website & Communications Sub-Committee (WSCS).

ASPP/ASPS  —  The beginning

We are in the process of writing a history of the Society planned for publication in 2019. This blog is a taste of the Society’s beginnings, but we are aware of gaps in our narrative.  Should anyone have other relevant information that you would be willing to share, we would be most appreciative.

Tina Offler and John Patrick, University of Newcastle

The mid-1940s onward witnessed a burgeoning growth in plant physiology research spread across CSIRO, State Departments of Agriculture and Universities. It was within this environment that Bob Robertson (to become Sir Rutherford Roberson and affectionately referred to as Sir Bob), in 1957, proposed the formation of ASPP to a group of leading national-based plant physiologists (Neales 1994). The group agreed to convene a one-day meeting linked with the programmed Adelaide Australian and New Zealand Association for the Advancement of Science (ANZAAS) conference. The one-day event was held on August 19, 1958 at which 12 papers were presented by GA Atkins, Peter Brownell, Martin Canny, Jack Dainty, Alex Hope, Ned Krefford, Nick Marinos, JD McLean, John Pate, Dugald Paton, Bob Williams and Harold Woolhouse. At the inaugural General Meeting held that afternoon, chaired by Sir Bob, the ASPP Constitution was approved along with the election of Lance May (Adelaide) as Honorary Secretary, Les Paleg (Adelaide) as Honorary Treasurer and Joseph Garnett Wood (Adelaide) as the first President. There seems to be some disparity in reports of the number of delegates attending the meeting with 64 and 69 reported and the original record of attendees having 66 signatures. However, what is not in dispute is that many of the signatures on these fading sheets of paper are of those you will recognise for their significant contributions to Australian Plant Science and to our society. To name but a few: Bob Robertson, John Pate, Alan Walker, Lloyd Evans, Peter Brownell, Hal Hatch, Harold Woolhouse, Martin Canny and so it goes on and on…… 

 

The CSIRO/Botany School Unit, headed by Bob Robertson, and housed in the Sydney University Botany Department was the core from which ASPP grew and expanded. Bob Robertson’s group comprised a dozen or so young plant physiologists who were to make major advances in our science, including Hal Hatch, Alex Hope, Jack Dainty (from Edinburg, UK), John Pate, Carrick Chambers, Don and Heather Adamson, John (F) and Donella Turner. Bob brought 14 of its members to Adelaide for the Inaugural Meeting, and it wasn’t easy to get there!!  In his “recollections” written for the 50th anniversary of the society, Martin Canny recounts that Hal Hatch said to me (Martin),

“Tell them how different it was, how difficult to get from Sydney to Adelaide.”

 

Apparently, in order to attend the Adelaide meeting he (Hal) had taken two days in trains, overnight from Sydney to Melbourne, with a midnight change at Albury to accommodate a shift in rail gauge from 4 feet 8 1/2 inches (New South Wales) to the Victorian line gauge of 5 feet 3 inches, then another overnight trip to Adelaide, with yet another change in railway gauge down to 3 feet 6 inches at the Victorian/South Australian boarder. And, there are other similar stories.

 

In the following year, the plant physiology community was saddened by the untimely death of JG  (Joe) Wood (1900 -1959) just prior to the second meeting of ASPP convened in Sydney across three days. Sir Bob was elected as the second ASPP President, a position he served in until 1962.  ASPP/ASPS has honoured these two foundation presidents for many years through the JG Wood and Robertson Lectures, presented by invitation biennially at ASPP/ComBio meetings in alternate years.  Also, amongst the attendees at the inaugural meeting in Adelaide was a talented young plant scientist, Dr Peter Goldacre who tragically died in 1960 before being able to fulfil his full research potential. It is in his honour that the prestigious Peter Goldacre Award has been awarded to an outstanding early career plant scientist each year since 1965.

 

 

 

Neales Tom (1994). Our Society; An Historical Perspective. An early history of the Australian Society of Plant Physiologists. ASPP Membership Directory and reproduced (with permission) in Phytogen 11(2), 11-18.

 

ASPS dinner at ComBio2018

12 August 2018

ASPS dinner at ComBio2018

Dear ASPS member,

We hope to see you at the coming ComBio2018 in our spectacular city of Sydney.

If so, you might be interested to attend a dinner where you can discuss collaborative research and networking sitting with fellow scientists while enjoying magnificent Darling Harbour views with delicious food at a very affordable price!

We are organising this year’s ASPS dinner which will be held on Tuesday, 25th September at Zaaffran Restaurant. (https://www.zaaffran.com/). You can sit and enjoy this harbourside restaurant where you will be amused by a marvellous Darling Harbour night view. It just a three minute harbour side walk from the ComBio2018 conference centre.   It is well worth a visit, so come along to refresh your mind after a long day full of scientific sessions and enjoy some good food and company.

This year the menu will be a three course Indian dinner with open bar with juice, soft drinks, red and white wine. We are offering you a high standard dinner at a very reasonable price, thanks to ASPS for the subsidy. The cost per ticket will be:

  • Students: $30
  • Academics and guests: $60

You can book your spot by emailing Kamal (kamal.uddin@sydney.edu.au) who will reply to you shortly, with the payment details and confirm your reservation after payment. Don’t forget to mention any dietary requirement in your email during booking.

For catering purposes we need to know the numbers in advance. So, if you really want to attend the ASPS dinner, please reserve your place and make your payment before Friday, 14th September.

We only have a limited number of tickets, so please don’t wait for the last moment to book your spot.

We looking forward to see you all at ComBio2018.

 

Warm regards,

ASPS Dinner Organising Committee

Register for ComBio2018 today and the GPC is hiring

22 June 2018

Hello ASPS members,

Today is the last day you can register for ComBio2018 and receive the early bird discount. http://www.combio.org.au/combio2018/

If you need to renew your ASPS membership you can use the e-mail address this newsletter was sent to as you login to reset your password then simply renew to get the discounted ASPS member rate. https://www.asps.org.au/renewal 

It will be the ASPS 60th anniversary at ComBio2018 so come and be part of our history.

 

—
Want to work with the Global Plant Council?We’re hiring a full-time Communications Officer, who will be responsible for managing the GPC’s online presence, relationships with Member Organizations, Affiliates and sponsors, and for performing administrative tasks.If you think you could help the GPC to accomplish its mission to promote collaboration between plant and crop scientists from around the world, please see our job advertisement for more information, and contact Sarah Jose (sarah@globalplantcouncil.org) if you have any questions. Click here for the full job description. Application deadline: 29th JUNE!

Kind regards,

Sarah Jose
Communications Officer
Global Plant Council
sarah@globalplantcouncil.org

Apply for ComBio student travel grant now! and GPC June e-bulletin

08 June 2018

Hello ASPS members,

ComBio2018 will mark the 60th anniversary of our society and is a great opportunity for the next generation of plant scientists to share their research and passion for plants with our community. As a society we provide travel grants to support our student members to attend ComBio.  If you are a student attending ComBio or the supervisor of a student attending ComBio this year apply for a travel grant by COB June 15th 2018.

Further details can be found at the ASPS ComBio travel grant web page.

 

ComBio2018: 23 – 26 September 2018, International Convention Centre Sydney, Darling Harbour
Early Registration & Abstract Deadline: Friday, 22 June 2018

We are pleased to advise that the Program Timetable and the Provisional Symposium Schedule can be downloaded from:
http://www.combio.org.au/combio2018/program.html
The Provisional Symposium Schedule includes the Stream Co-ordinators, the titles of each of the 73 sessions and the Chairs of each of the sessions.

Online registration and abstract submission will be available towards the end of April 2018 and we will send a further email when these pages are live. The early registration and abstract submission deadline is 22 June 2018.

ComBio2018 is a combination of six societies holding their annual meetings with the International Society of Differentiation partnering with the Australia and New Zealand Society of Cell and Developmental Biology, and the New Zealand Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the New Zealand Society of Plant Biologists joining in with the Australian Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Australian Society of Plant Scientists.

The ASBMB Grimwade Keynote Plenary Lecturer is Randy Wayne Schekman. Professor Schekman is a Nobel Prize-winning American professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley whose research in vesicular trafficking is highly relevant across both plant and animal systems. The ASPS is pleased to support two plenary lectures, including the R.N. Robertson Award & Lecture, which will be given by Dr Michael Udvardi (Noble Research Institute) and the ASPS Jan Anderson Award & Lecture (speaker TBC). The ASPS in conjunction the Annals of Botany and Functional Plant Biology will deliver the Annals of Botany Lecture to be given by Professor Keiko Torii (University of Washington) and the ASPS Peter Goldacre Award Dr Caitlin Byrt. The names and institutions of all confirmed international plenary speakers can be seen at: http://www.combio.org.au/combio2018/plenary.html

 

ComBio2018 Program

www.combio.org.au

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Global Plant Council E-Bulletin June 2018
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E-Bulletin / 
June 2018
Welcome to this month’s newsletter! Check out the information below for a chance to work with the GPC, be involved with our New Breeding Technologies initiative, or to learn more about our upcoming workshop on “Enhancing Global Collaborations in Crop Science“.
—
Want to work with the Global Plant Council?We’re hiring a full-time Communications Officer, who will be responsible for managing the GPC’s online presence, relationships with Member Organizations, Affiliates and sponsors, and for performing administrative tasks.

If you think you could help the GPC to accomplish its mission to promote collaboration between plant and crop scientists from around the world, please see our job advertisement for more information, and contact Sarah Jose (sarah@globalplantcouncil.org) if you have any questions. Click here for the full job description. Application deadline: 29th JUNE!
—

New Breeding Technologies

Our New Breeding Technologies Working Group are working on a number of exciting initiatives to help support researchers with both practical and legislative advice, as well as developing materials that explain the safety and utility of these technologies.

If you are interested and/or knowledgeable in New Breeding Technologies, please sign up to our New Breeding Technologies mailing list to receive updates or requests for information from the New Breeding Technologies Working Group.
—
GPC Workshop

The next GPC workshop, entitled “Enhancing Global Collaborations in Crop Science”, will be held in association with the ASA CSSA annual meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, USA, on 4th November. At this one-day event, attendees will hear from experts in both crop science research and policy, and discuss new ideas for enhancing collaboration and kickstart an initiative to address one of the world’s major food security challenges.

The workshop will cost just $20, and places will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis.

For more information, please click here.

 

Latest News / 
View more…If you have news you would like us to share on our website, please contact sarah@globalplantcouncil.org
This month 50 new breaking news stories were posted on the GPC website including…

New special issue in Journal of Experimental Biology: Strigolactones: New Plant Hormones in Action
Strigolactones were only recently recognized as an important new class of plant hormone, and are now the subject of intensive research. The reviews and research in the latest special issue from Journal of Experimental Botany cover the rapid growth in our understanding of their diverse roles, as well as novel agricultural applications.

In Frontiers in Plant Science: Cocoa CRISPR gene editing shows promise for improving the ‘chocolate tree’
Use of the powerful gene-editing tool CRISPR-Cas9 could help to breed cacao trees that exhibit desirable traits such as enhanced resistance to diseases.

Battling bubbles: How plants protect themselves from killer fungus
In the battle between plants and pathogens, molecules called small RNAs are coveted weapons used by both invaders and defenders. Researchers report how plants package and deliver the small RNAs, or sRNAs, they use to fight back against plant pathogens.

Mistletoe has lost ‘most of its respiratory capacity’
Two independent studies show that mistletoe’s parasitic lifestyle has led the species to a rather surprising evolutionary loss. Mistletoe lacks key components of the cellular machinery other organisms depend upon to convert glucose into the energy-carrying molecule ATP.

In the Journal of Experimental Botany: How wheat can root out the take-all fungus
Winter wheat varieties can strongly support naturally occurring populations of beneficial fungi, which suppress the pathogenic take-all fungus.

Why plants are so sensitive to gravity: the lowdown
If you tilt a plant, it will alter its growth to bend back upwards, but how does it detect the inclination? Tiny gravity-detecting grains, known as statoliths, behave like a fluid, detecting even the slightest incline without being affecting by movements such as wind.

 

 

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 sarah@globalplantcouncil.org
GPC workshop: Enhancing Global Collaborations in Crop Science
04 November 2018. Baltimore, Maryland, USA.5th International Plant Phenotyping Symposium
02–05 October 2018. Adelaide, Australia.

Plant Biology 2018
14–18 July 2018. Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

 

 

On the blog / 
View more…Would you like to contribute an article to the GPC’s blog? Please get in touch! Email sarah@globalplantcouncil.org
An economist’s perspective on plant sciences: Under-appreciated, over-regulated and under-funded
Agricultural and Resource Economics Professor David Zilberman writes about the economics of plant science research, its achievements, and the funding it receives.

 

Members / 

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

Please contact us (info@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 © 2018 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

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London, EC4M 9EE

United Kingdom

Add us to your address book

Call for new ASPS Exec and discipline members

23 May 2018

Hello ASPS members past and present,

 

COMBIO 2019, (23th-26th September) in Sydney, will be the venue of our annual meeting held in our 60th Anniversary year of ASPS.

 

As well as the science sessions at COMBIO we will have 2 events for ASPS, the ASPS dinner which will be held on the Tuesday night – you will be hearing about this event very soon – and the AGM which will be held on the Wednesday lunch.

 

We hope you can all attend and make this a special COMBIO in our anniversary year.

 

Furthermore, we are looking for volunteers to help us to continue in our role in assisting and shaping the future of the Australian Plant Science community? If you have ideas of how to build and strengthen our community, please consider joining the ASPS exec.

 

We are looking to fill 3 vacancies this year:

 

Honorary Secretary

Honorary Treasurer

Plant-Microbe Interactions rep

 

If you are keen on taking on one of these roles please fill out the attached form.

 

We look forward to your involvement.

 

Many thanks,

 

Matt

 

_________________

Professor Matthew Gilliham

Honorary Secretary, Aust Soc Plant Scientists

ComBio 2018

18 April 2018

Dear ASPS Past and Present Members

We are pleased to advise that the photographs from ComBio2017 can now be viewed at: http://www.combio.org.au/combio2017/

ComBio2018: 23 – 26 September 2018, International Convention Centre Sydney, Darling Harbour
Early Registration & Abstract Deadline: Friday, 22 June 2018

We are pleased to advise that the Program Timetable and the Provisional Symposium Schedule can be downloaded from:
http://www.combio.org.au/combio2018/program.html
The Provisional Symposium Schedule includes the Stream Co-ordinators, the titles of each of the 73 sessions and the Chairs of each of the sessions.

Online registration and abstract submission will be available towards the end of April 2018 and we will send a further email when these pages are live. The early registration and abstract submission deadline is 22 June 2018.

ComBio2018 is a combination of six societies holding their annual meetings with the International Society of Differentiation partnering with the Australia and New Zealand Society of Cell and Developmental Biology, and the New Zealand Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the New Zealand Society of Plant Biologists joining in with the Australian Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Australian Society of Plant Scientists.

The ASBMB Grimwade Keynote Plenary Lecturer is Randy Wayne Schekman. Professor Schekman is a Nobel Prize-winning American professor of molecular and cell biology at the University of California, Berkeley whose research in vesicular trafficking is highly relevant across both plant and animal systems. The ASPS is pleased to support two plenary lectures, including the R.N. Robertson Award & Lecture, which will be given by Dr Michael Udvardi (Noble Research Institute) and the ASPS Jan Anderson Award & Lecture (speaker TBC). The ASPS in conjunction the Annals of Botany and Functional Plant Biology will deliver the Annals of Botany Lecture to be given by Professor Keiko Torii (University of Washington) and the ASPS Peter Goldacre Award (speaker TBC). The names and institutions of all confirmed international plenary speakers can be seen at: http://www.combio.org.au/combio2018/plenary.html

ComBio2017

www.combio.org.au

Welcome Invitation from the Chair of the Conference. We are delighted to extend an invitation to participate in ComBio2017. ComBio2017 will be held at the new and state of the art Adelaide Convention Centre located in the heart of the city on the Torrens River, and overlooking the magnificent Adelaide Oval Precinct.

 

ComBio2018 Program

www.combio.org.au

If you can still read this message after the webpage has finished loading, then your browser may not be capable of using CSS to display this site correctly.

 

ComBio2018 Plenary

www.combio.org.au

Plenary International Plenary Speakers. Photographs and biographies will be added as they become available. Gary Brouhard – McGill University, Quebec, Canada

 

Kind regards
Sally

Sally Jay
ASBMB National Office
ComBio2018 Secretariat

Registrations now open for AgEd Symposium, Adelaide June 21-22 2018.

10 April 2018

AgEd Symposium brings together the academic community in agriculture and related disciplines at Australian tertiary and VET institutions.

Themes include developing curriculum to meet industry needs, work integrated learning, entrepreneurship skills, inquiry-oriented approaches for interdisciplinary learning, online & flipped learning.

Ag Ed A4 flyer

Keynote speakers include:

Professor Beverley Oliver (Deakin, Assuring Graduate Outcomes)

Professor Morgan Miles (CSU, Developing Entrepreneurship Skills)

Dr Peter Sale (LTU, Flipping First Year)

 

To register and submit abstracts please visit:

https://agwine.adelaide.edu.au/ag-ed-symposium/registration/

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