By Rebecca Morelle

Science reporter, BBC News

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. Advertisement An international seed bank has reached its target of collecting 10% of the world's wild plants, with seeds of a pink banana among its latest entries. The wild banana, Musa itinerans, is a favourite of wild Asian elephants. Seeds from the plant, which is under threat from agriculture, join 1.7 billion already stored by Kew's Millennium Seed Bank partnership. The project has been described as an "insurance strategy" against future biodiversity losses. A wild banana has been chosen as a flagship species The seed bank partnership, which involves more than 120 organisations in 54 countries, is now aiming to collect and conserve seeds from a quarter of the Earth's flowering plant species by 2020. All the seeds are kept both in their country of origin and in Royal Botanic Gardens Kew's premises at Wakehurst Place, West Sussex, where they are stored in underground vaults that are kept at -20C. The plant material is dried, cleaned and sorted, ensuring only the finest specimens make it into the giant freezers. There, the cold and arid conditions keep the seeds in pristine condition for anywhere between a few years to thousands of years, depending on the species. The seeds are painstakingly cleaned and sorted The aim is that each seed stored in the bank can be regrown, should the need arise. The wild banana plant from China was selected as the "10% species" by the bank's international collaborators because it fulfilled a number of conservation criteria. Janet Terry, the seed processing manager at the bank, said: "It was chosen because it is representative of what the whole project is all about - it is endemic, endangered and it is an economic species. "And of course, everybody loves a banana." Musa itinerans becomes the 24,200th species to have been stored in the seed bank.

Bank on seeds - the world's buffer The 10% target was set when the Wakehurst Place facility was completed in 2000. At that time, it was estimated that there were 242,000 plant species in the world, although more recently it is thought that there might be 300,000. Professor Stephen Hopper, director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, told BBC News: "In the next phase, we want to secure another 15%, so by 2020 we will have a quarter of the world's seeds banked in both the country of origin and Wakehurst Place. "And a major focus is going to be a considerable expansion in the sustainable use of seeds for human benefit." The researchers will be focusing on food security, biodiversity loss and climate change. Professor Hopper added: "The thing that has changed over this 10-year period is a much more acute awareness of climate change as a threatening process, as well as the many others that impact on plant life. "And the seed bank, as an insurance strategy, is a good sensible way of keeping your options open for the future." So far, the project has cost £73.6m; RBG Kew estimates that it will cost another £140m over the next decade to reach the next set of targets.



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