News Release

People and plants: Working together for the planet

Plants, People, Planet, a new cross-disciplinary Open Access journal, launches today

Business Announcement

New Phytologist Foundation

<i>Plants, People, Planet</i> Volume 1, Issue 1 Cover

image: During springtime in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan, Nemophila flowers form a blue carpet that attracts crowds of people who queue up to admire this beautiful event. Image courtesy of Tetsuo Wada/Aflo. view more 

Credit: <i>Plants, People, Planet</i> / Tetsuo Wada / Aflo.

We rely on plants for food, shelter, fuel and fibres for clothing, for our gardens, landscape, and artistic inspiration. We live on a planet where life is powered by plants through photosynthesis, on land and in the sea; plants connect all of us. Human civilisation exists because of plants.

Plants, People, Planet, a cross-disciplinary Open Access journal, launches today with its first issue. Plants, People, Planet will publish peer-reviewed articles, opinion and review that focuses on the connections between plant science and society. The new journal aims to celebrate everything new, innovative and exciting in plant sciences that is relevant to society and peoples' daily lives.

Issue 1 of Plants, People, Planet, which will be published today, includes insights into the unbreakable bond between people and plants from Sandra Knapp (Natural History Museum, London), seven ways for plant scientists to protect the planet's plant diversity by Peter Raven (Missouri Botanical Garden), and the challenge for botanical gardens by Paul Smith (Botanic Gardens Conservation International, BGCI). Chris Thorogood (Oxford Botanical Garden) introduces us to Hydnora, possibly the world's strangest plant.

Our complex relationship with plants shapes societies, cultures, and the Earth's ecosystems, resulting in the world as we know it today. As the human race grows the work of plant scientists has never been more important, as it seeks to meet the global challenges of the 21st Century.

Plants, People, Planet will publish emerging plant science that has the potential for impact on society - Societal Impact Statements will highlight how each contributed article is relevant to society. The journal will publish across six themes:

  • Plants and society

  • Plant conservation

  • Plant genomics applications

  • Plant diversity

  • Plants and global change

  • Plant natural assets

Plants, People, Planet is owned and produced by the New Phytologist Trust, the not-for-profit organisation behind the peer-reviewed plant science journal, New Phytologist, which was founded by Sir Arthur Tansley over 100 years ago.

Plants, People, Planet will be available online at: https://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/25722611

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