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Surviving seeds from Hiroshima to be planted in UCC

25 Nov 2021
A Ginkgo tree on UCC campus by Tom谩s Tyner

Amongst the only living things to survive the detonation of a nuclear bomb over Hiroshima in 1945 were 200-year-old trees, now their seeds will be planted in Ireland, with the eventual trees being made available to local communities across the country.

In the aftermath of the bombing, which killed an estimated 140,000 of Hiroshima's 350,000 population, a 鈥榤aidenhair tree鈥 Ginkgo biloba, was found intact in in the Shukkeien Garden in Hiroshima, about 1 kilometre from the centre of the explosion. Also found was an Oriental Plane tree, still standing at the Tenma Elementary School. This tree was planted in 1931 by the students. All of the school buildings were destroyed in the explosion. 13 staff members and 280 students died.

Now seeds from these 鈥榮urvivor trees鈥 (Hibakujumoku鈥) have been dispatched from Hiroshima to Ireland where they will planted in the spring on the campus of UCC, with the eventual trees being made available to local communities across Ireland.

鈥淭hese are certainly 鈥榮eeds with a story鈥欌 Head of Plant Science at UCC, Dr Barbara Doyle Prestwich. 鈥淭heir arrival at UCC will be a way of engaging students and our communities with the importance of plants, not just from a scientific perspective but also as a means of sharing history and a message of peace and cooperation with global partners鈥. Once the seeds have successfully germinated and grown in Cork, the trees will be planted in the UCC Arboretum as well as in the community at large. The UCC Arboretum dates to the 1840s and includes a variety of important and impressive specimen trees.

Emma Hutchinson, Research Assistant on the Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)-funded "Tree Explorers鈥 project at UCC said the opportunity to cultivate these trees in Cork will be a great addition to the project. 鈥淚n our interaction with school children and the general public, we try to emphasise the connections that trees make between science, history, culture and our own lives. These trees will be a very special addition to the collection鈥.

The transfer of the seeds to Ireland is down to a new partnership between UCC and Green Legacy Hiroshima an initiative, begun in 2011, by the United Nations (UN) Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) and the Asian Network of Trust (ANT-Hiroshima). Dr Eoin Lettice, UCC Plant Scientist, said he was happy to facilitate UCC becoming the first partner institution in Ireland. 鈥淚t's exciting to have the opportunity to add such historic trees to the collection through the exchange of these offspring of the unique survivor trees (or 'Hibakujumoku') . Apart from the scientific interest, I welcome the opportunity to engage with the principles of Green Legacy Hiroshima and to recall the dangers and futility of war; the resilience of nature; and to promote global peace and cooperation".

School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences

An Scoil Eolaíochtaí Bitheolaíocha, Domhaneolaíocha agus Comhshaoil

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