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Scientific Meeting - The Frozen Ark Project

Dates: 13 May 2008

Times: 6:00 pm - 7:45 pm

The Frozen Ark is a global innovative conservation project that has taken on the ambitious task of preserving genetic material from the world's endangered species before they go extinct.

Frozen Ark Animal species are dying out at a rate exceeded only during the three greatest environmental disasters in the history of the world. The project aims to ensure that the information of millions of years of evolution is not lost, that future scientists will have the knowledge of the world's lost animals and that genetic material will be available to aid captive breeding programmes.

Przewalskis horse cultured cellThe Frozen Ark is collecting, preserving and storing tissue, DNA, viable somatic cells and where possible, the gametes and embryos, from the many thousands of vertebrate and invertebrate species expected to disappear within the next few decades. Samples are being obtained from captive breeding programmes, from zoos and aquaria and from wild populations. The project, which has been set up as a charity, is being coordinated from the University of Nottingham with major input from ZSL and the Natural History Museum. A growing number of Consortium Members of The Frozen Ark in the UK and around the world are setting up their own national Frozen Arks. A key component will be to establish a global database of what species already exist in established collections and which species are most urgently in need of collection.

snail E. rosea good If this genetic resource is not preserved, vast amounts of information about an animal's relationships, evolution, genetics, development, and ecology will be irreplaceably lost, captive breeding programmes will fail due to a lack of genetic diversity and the possibility of bring back extinct animals as future technologies allow will no longer be a future option.

Organised by Professor Bill Holt, Institute of Zoology, ZSL

Talks
The Frozen Ark - an introduction
Dr Ann Clarke - Co-founder of the Frozen Ark Project and Managing Trustee at The Frozen Ark Office at the University of Nottingham
The Frozen Ark: priorities for collection
Professor Phil Rainbow - Keeper of Zoology, The Natural History Museum, London
Challenges and Opportunities: Cryobanking of material from endangered fish species
Professor David Rawson - LIRANS Institute of Research in the Applied Natural Sciences, University of Bedfordshire
Cryobanks: how can we use them to support endangered species?
Professor Bill Holt - Institute of Zoology, ZSL

pdf Frozen Ark Project Scientific Meeting abstracts (126 KB)

Please note that this event was part of the 2007-08 Scientific Meetings programme

The talks are free and open to the public (no advance booking or registration required). Talks will begin at 6.00pm; doors open at 5.30pm and seats will be allocated on a first-come-first-served basis. A dinner with the speakers will follow this Scientific Meeting and places must be booked in advance. Please download booking form for further information.

Further Information: please contact Joy Hayward, Scientific Meetings Coordinator, Zoological Society of London, Regents Park, London NW1 4RY.
Tel:+44 (0)20 7449 6227. Fax: +44 (0)20 7449 6411. E-mail: joy.hayward@zsl.org.

Related links
ZSL Scientific Meetings
Map showing ZSL Meeting Rooms
The Frozen Ark - saving the DNA of endangered species
Information on the Fellows Reception


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