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<titleInfo><title>Plants as Digital Things</title></titleInfo>

  
  
<titleInfo type="alternative">
  
  <title>The Global Circulation of Future Breeding Options and Their Storage in Gene Banks</title>
</titleInfo>

<note type="publicationStatus">published</note>


<note type="qualityControlled">yes</note>

<name type="personal">
  <namePart type="given">Suzana</namePart>
  <namePart type="family">Alpsancar</namePart>
  <role><roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm> </role><identifier type="local">93637</identifier></name>














<abstract lang="eng">Seeds have traditionally been collected according to their reproductive cycles, i.e. the time when they lose their potential of becoming a
real plant. Therefore, the locations of botanic gardens or seed banks imply
the vicinity of agricultural land. This article exemplifies the transformation
of plant collections into gene and data banks by investigating the Svalbard
Global Seed Vault (SGSV) in Norway and the German Genebank for Fruit
Crops (DGO). It shows that international efforts to safeguard biodiversity
by intertwining them with bioinformatics infrastructure transform seeds
and other plant genetic material into digitalized objects. The almost virtual
genetic material, now stored without the neighborhood of acres or gardens, is, at the same time, seen as “options” for new high-tech plants,
which might be transplanted to a future territory. Consequently, plant varieties are circulating around the globe in form of genetic material and data.
The article shows that the digitalization induces a specific distinction between the material and the digital flows of plants. </abstract>

<originInfo><dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">2016</dateIssued>
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<language><languageTerm authority="iso639-2b" type="code">eng</languageTerm>
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<relatedItem type="host"><titleInfo><title>Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp; Technology Studies</title></titleInfo>
  <identifier type="issn">2038-3460</identifier>
<part><detail type="volume"><number>7</number></detail><detail type="issue"><number>1</number></detail><extent unit="pages">45-66</extent>
</part>
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<bibliographicCitation>
<ieee>S. Alpsancar, “Plants as Digital Things,” &lt;i&gt;Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies&lt;/i&gt;, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 45–66, 2016.</ieee>
<apa>Alpsancar, S. (2016). Plants as Digital Things. &lt;i&gt;Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies&lt;/i&gt;, &lt;i&gt;7&lt;/i&gt;(1), 45–66.</apa>
<chicago>Alpsancar, Suzana. “Plants as Digital Things.” &lt;i&gt;Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies&lt;/i&gt; 7, no. 1 (2016): 45–66.</chicago>
<short>S. Alpsancar, Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies 7 (2016) 45–66.</short>
<mla>Alpsancar, Suzana. “Plants as Digital Things.” &lt;i&gt;Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies&lt;/i&gt;, vol. 7, no. 1, 2016, pp. 45–66.</mla>
<bibtex>@article{Alpsancar_2016, title={Plants as Digital Things}, volume={7}, number={1}, journal={Tecnoscienza. Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies}, author={Alpsancar, Suzana}, year={2016}, pages={45–66} }</bibtex>
<ama>Alpsancar S. Plants as Digital Things. &lt;i&gt;Tecnoscienza Italian Journal of Science &amp;#38; Technology Studies&lt;/i&gt;. 2016;7(1):45-66.</ama>
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