The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, referred to as the Plant Treaty, was approved on 3 November 2001 by Members of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), headquartered in Rome, Italy. The FAO is an agency of the United Nations, headquartered in New York City, New York. The Plant Treaty established international standards for the conservation and exchange of plant genetic material between participating countries. Plant genetic material is a term for plant germplasm, the physical material used by plants to reproduce themselves, and the term connotes seeds, vegetative propagations, and DNA. Plant genetic resources are the collective genetic diversity of plant species in the laboratory, farm, and field. They are described as resources because of their value for food and agricultural purposes.
Details
- International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (2001)
- Baranski, Marci (Author)
- O'Brien, Ceara (Editor)
- Law
- Germplasm resources, Plant
- Germplasm resources, Plant--Law and legislation
- biodiversity
- United Nations associations
- Germplasm resources, Plant--Utilization
- Agrobiodiversity
- Crops
- Agriculture and state
- International relations
- Soybean
- Seeds
- International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture (2001 November 3)
- Convention on Biological Diversity (1992 June 5). Protocols, etc. (2010 October 29)
- Convention on Biological Diversity (Organization)
- Swaminathan, M. S. (Monkombu Sambasivan)
- International Board for Plant Genetic Resources
- Fowler, Cary
- Legal
- material transfer agreement
- Plant Treaty