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Botanic Gardens in the Arabian Peninsula
Author(s) -
Ahmed H. Al Farhan,
Ibrahim M.N. Aldjain,
Jacob Thomas,
Anthony G. Miller,
S. G. Knees,
Othman Llewellyn,
Akram Ali
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
sibbaldia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2513-9231
DOI - 10.24823/sibbaldia.2008.43
Subject(s) - peninsula , flora (microbiology) , geography , safeguarding , vegetation (pathology) , floristics , amenity , agroforestry , environmental protection , ecology , archaeology , species richness , biology , genetics , medicine , nursing , pathology , bacteria , political science , law
Botanic gardens in the Arabian Peninsula and adjacent countries, along with institutions such as museums, universities and research centres, have long played a major role in the exploration, identification and conservation of this region’s flora and vegetation. The primary aim of botanic gardens in the past was to study the plant world from the horticultural point of view and to cultivate plants of economic or medicinal importance. However, at present, particularly in arid regions such as the Arabian Peninsula, the activities of botanic gardens are focused primarily on (i) the study and exploration of the region’s rapidly vanishing flora, thereby safeguarding gene pools of wild species, and (ii) the assessment and preservation of species that may be of importance to humans and animals for food, medicines, fibre and amenity. Recently established botanic gardens in the region, including the proposed King Abdullah International Gardens in Riyadh and Oman Botanic Garden near Muscat, will enhance existing conservation activities concerning the ailing and rapidly vanishing floristic components of the Arabian Peninsula.

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