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    <title>LinkTV World News Video Feed</title>
    <link>http://news.linktv.org</link>
    <description>Link TV News Videos (Filtered by topics: Botany)</description>
    <language>en-us</language>
    <pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 2012 12:26:00 -0700</pubDate>
    <copyright>Copyright 2011 Link Media, Inc.</copyright>
      <item>
        <title>Shaman's Apprentice</title>
        <link>http://news.linktv.org/videos/shamans-apprentice?start=0</link>
        <description>Deep in the jungles of Suriname, Dr. Mark Plotkin is racing against time. Here in the vast canopy of trees is a treasure of unknown dimension--the chemically rich and diverse plant life of the forest--the secrets of which could one day yield cures for our most troubling illnesses. But the world is standing outside the treasury door with a torch in its hand, hungry for land, gold, and timber. Mark Plotkin, a committed and passionate conservationist, has vowed to save this forest, acre by acre. For more than twenty years Mark has searched the Amazon for plants that heal. He is an ethnobotanist, a scientist who studies the relationship between indigenous people and plants. Inspired by the great explorer Richard Evans Schultes, Mark set out from Harvard on a mission to find a new treatment for diabetes, the disease that killed his two grandmothers. What Mark has found in those green and tangled forests has been more complex, more interesting than mere medicine. The Shaman&amp;rsquo;s Apprentice charts the story of Mark&amp;rsquo;s discoveries in his own words, and looks with fresh eyes at the astonishing ability of native people to manage their environment.</description>
        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 2012 12:26:00 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid>http://news.linktv.org/videos/shamans-apprentice</guid>
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        <media:keywords>Mark Plotkin, Suriname, Ethnobotanist, Amazon Rainforest, Rare species, Shamanism, Indigenous peoples of the Americas, Botany, Ethnobotany, Conservation</media:keywords>
        <media:text>Deep in the jungles of Suriname, Dr. Mark Plotkin is racing against time. Here is the Amazon of legend, where men become jaguars, where frogs cry along the riverbanks with voices of lonely women, where fire-feathered birds screech and click in a thicket of vines. Here are remote tribes of Amerindians, eighteenth century African villages, and forest people living in the Stone Age. Here in the vast canopy of trees is a treasure of unknown dimension--the chemically rich and diverse plant life of the forest--the secrets of which could one day yield cures for our most troubling illnesses. But the world is standing outside the treasury door with a torch in its hand, hungry for land, gold, and timber. Mark Plotkin, a committed and passionate conservationist, has vowed to save this forest, acre by acre.

For more than twenty years Mark has searched the Amazon for plants that heal. He is an ethnobotanist, a scientist who studies the relationship between indigenous people and plants. Inspired by the great explorer Richard Evans Schultes, Mark set out from Harvard on a mission to find a new treatment for diabetes, the disease that killed his two grandmothers. What Mark has found in those green and tangled forests has been more complex, more interesting than mere medicine. The Shaman’s Apprentice charts the story of Mark’s discoveries in his own words, and looks with fresh eyes at the astonishing ability of native people to manage their environment.

People of the forests have become sophisticated chemists by necessity, utilizing plants for every aspect of their lives. Often, the entire knowledge of a tribe resides in the mind of the shaman - the tribe’s doctor and spiritual leader - the man or woman who is this generation's link in a long cultural chain that stretches back into pre-history. They encode their wisdom in the language of myth and dreams, and live in a world where magic is as ordinary as daylight. These shamans are the Rosetta stones of the Amazon. Only through them is it possible to interpret the bewildering profusion of botanical information collected by their people.

But the shamans are also the most endangered species in all the Amazon. Marooned in time by the loss of traditional ways, many of the native healers have no apprentices. Most are old, and each shaman's death is a kind of extinction. It is these shamans that Mark seeks out, hoping to save their precious knowledge as one might save genetic material. We may desperately need this information in the future, to treat illnesses, to develop new foods, fiber, or industrial products, or to restore balance to our planet.

The Shaman's Apprentice is a story of survival against the odds. It interweaves the luminous rain forest world of phenomena and legends with western science and the grim realities of extinction. In the story of one man's quest to preserve the ancient wisdom of our species, we find the intelligence, cooperation and hope that could save one of the most glorious places on Earth. </media:text>
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      <item>
        <title>Future Food: Hunting Rare Plant Species in Kenya</title>
        <link>http://news.linktv.org/videos/future-food-hunting-rare-plant-species-in-kenya?start=0</link>
        <description>Kenyan botanist Paul Kirika and Tim Pearce from Kew Gardens in the UK are searching for rare plant species known as &quot;crop wild relatives&quot; in the mountains of Kenya that they believe could hold the key to human food security in a changing climate.</description>
        <pubDate>Tue, 12 Jun 2012 15:15:00 -0700</pubDate>
        <guid>http://news.linktv.org/videos/future-food-hunting-rare-plant-species-in-kenya</guid>
        <media:thumbnail url="http://news.linktv.org/images/image_cache/base-5544000/5544723/thumbnail.width=640,height=360,grow=1,crop=center.jpg?sig=89528488f485060ee2269635d398ff81" />
        <media:keywords>Food security, Seed bank, Crop wild relative, Kenya, Botany, Aberdare National Park, Crop diversity, Endangered species, Climate change, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew</media:keywords>
        <media:text>Paul Kirika is the son of the famous Kenyan botanist, the late Mzee Kajui, and is now himself considered one of the most knowledgeable field botanists in East Africa. His work has taken him from the coastal forests to the mountaintops, from the humid lake region to the dry and remote northern areas and the dwindling forests around Nairobi. Together with Tim Pearce, a botanist from the UK, he has been struggling to find rare plant species in the mountains of Kenya that he believes could hold the key to human food security in a changing climate.</media:text>
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