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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)

 

Advanced Greenhouse Research and Education Training Facility for Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment

12 August 2016

Greenhouse Research Education Training Facility

HIAL

The world-class greenhouse facility, currently under development at the University’s Hawkesbury Campus, is a partnership between the University and Horticulture Innovation Australia (HIAL).

With a bold vision is to enhance national and international food security for an energy and water constrained future, this new facility will help Australian growers tap into the latest research and practices within greenhouse crop production to make their operations more efficient, and meet the increased demand for fresh food that can be delivered quickly to markets. The facility will have a strong education and training focus, working in partnership with industry partners to provide a student experience which produces career-ready graduates through involvement in engaged learning, projects and research in their studies.

Why is the Western Sydney University Greenhouse unique?

The Greenhouse RETF will enable unprecedented control of temperature, humidity, CO2 and light to deliver higher productivity while lowering energy and water inputs. Based on a design from the  Wageningen University Research in The Netherlands, the Greenhouse will provide high levels of control over humidity, temperature, light and CO2.  This facility – the first of its kind and scale in Australia – will allow researchers to test multiple conditions affecting the growth of plants in protected crop environments.  The results of this research will be increased crop yields and lower costs to both the producers and the environment.

The Design

The nearest known equivalent greenhouse research facility is located in The Netherlands,at the Wageningen University Greenhouse Horticulture Research Institute (WUR).  To ensure a state-of-the-art Facility design, Western Sydney University has partnered with experts from WUR, Dr JC (Sjaak) Bekker and Dr Silke Hemming, for consultation and advice as to the most appropriate design and construction for the University Greenhouse Research Education and Training Facility. This partnership with WUR creates an opportunity for Western Sydney University to position itself as a national leader in greenhouse horticulture research and education.  This partnership will include staff and student exchanges, joint supervision of postgraduate research students, and assistance from WUR to develop training and education resource material.WUR image

The Industry Consulting Committee

The Greenhouse Research Education and Training Facility Industry Consultation Committee (ICC) provides strategic direction to the research and education programs, as well as providing input into the design phase of the Facility.

The ICC consists of eight to twelve members, including representatives from the two main stakeholder organisations (Western Sydney University and HIAL), influential leaders from tertiary education, vocation and training, government, business, communications and/or community sectors; who are committed to contributing to the Facility’s objectives. The ICC is Chaired by Mr Graeme Smith from Protected Cropping Australia.

Research Goals

  • Interaction of plant sciences – engineering, economics
  • Establish bench marks in productivity, water use, energy efficiency for key crops
  • Investigate contrasting greenhouse covering materials on light, crop growth and energy balance
  • Investigate potential of ‘closed’ systems on crop growth, temperature, CO2, water use and energy efficiency
  • Integrated studies, analysis of overall system productivity, sustainability, efficiency.

The research team of Prof. David Tissue, Zhonghua Chen and Chris Cazzonelli are excited to drive new research areas to advance horticultural research within the Australian climate.

Training and Skill Development

The training of qualified, forward-thinking graduates is crucial to ensure that Australia has a bright future in the Agriculture sector. In collaboration with industry, the Western Sydney University Greenhouse RETF will provide a quality education program in the agriculture space.

Western Sydney University has committed to refresh and renew the way in which it offers and promotes ‘agriculture’ to provide a new, robust suite of agriculture and associated units, majors, sub majors, minors and courses that will offer students the opportunity to enter careers that meets global needs and student interest.

While the research program will generate new management practises and technologies, a training and education centre will also be established as part of the project to assist industry in building a future skilled workforce. The Greenhouse RETF will be an icon for peri-urban agriculture research, education and training at the University.

The research, education and training carried out at this facility is expected to result in a large number of partnership opportunities for UWS, resulting in collaborations with the protected cropping industry, TAFE, related government agencies and regional, national and international communities.

Email: David Thompson | Communications Officer

Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment
P: 0429 951 552 or 02 4570 1623

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

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1a Bow Lane

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United Kingdom

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