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Progress of gene
conservation of Norway spruce (Picea abies Karst.) in Sweden
Lennart Ackzell
The discussion following the network’s last
meeting in Finland 1996 revealed the crucial and necessary and yet
so difficult task to develop national strategies for international
gene conservation. To co-ordinate actions like networks of archives
when the national conditions puts firm limitation on what can be
achieved is problematic. These national conditions are often very
time dependent but the operational and strategic gene conservation
has to be done within our systems. An awareness of these very
different conditions is a needed base for mutual understanding as
well as a frame out of which initiatives like EUFORGEN can give a
supporting hand.
From the discussion in Finland we have found
reasons to explain certain Swedish conditions. Here we have only 5%
of State forests, mainly low productive forest close to the mountain
range. Forest companies manage 45% and private owners 50% of the
forestland. This implies that general political declaration of
protected conservation areas become extremely costly and the means
we have at our disposal is agreements with the landowners or legal
measures.
We have in the Swedish Forest Gene
Conservation Programme agreements with different landowners for the
establishments of 67 Picea abies plantations and 6 clonal archives.
These agreements consists simply of that the Programme ensure the
establishment of the sampled origins and that the landowner do not
add other origins, provide access to material and for measurements
by scientists or public servants and accept to notify the
authorities before cutting. The timber is the landowners.
Since the meeting in Finland-96 the clonal
archives, which are around 10 years old have been tended to ensure a
successful survival and development of the young ramets. The local
extension service have been more engaged in the management and
supervision of both the clonal archives as well as the plantations.
The legal measures includes basically the
official approving of seed sources, restrictions on clonal forestry
and restrictions on movements of forest reproductive material. In
Sweden we found the OECD category "Source Identified" a
helpful tool for genetic diversity in our managed forests. For
clonal forestry of Picea abies the lower limits in a clonal
plantation is 29 clones. We have movements’ restrictions and we
believe we have to make the plant buyers aware of the need to ask
for information about origin or provenance to avoid genotypes with
low adaptation.
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