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Scholarship Sows Seed for NZer’s Endandgered Plant Research

12:20 March 22, 2012Pacific Press Releases 0 comments

Press Release – Guardian Trust

When a bird species or subspecies becomes extinct, what happens to the plants that are reliant on that bird for re-pollination? Most of us never consider the problem, but Kiwi PhD candidate Richard Pender is devoting his doctoral study to examining …Media Release February 2012

SCHOLARSHIP SOWS THE SEED FOR NEW ZEALANDER’S RESEARCH INTO THE REPRODUCTION OF ENDANGERED PLANT SPECIES

When a bird species or subspecies becomes extinct, what happens to the plants that are reliant on that bird for re-pollination? Most of us never consider the problem, but Kiwi PhD candidate Richard Pender is devoting his doctoral study to examining how endangered plants can reproduce in the absence of their pollinators.

Christchurch-born Mr Pender is expanding his passion for horticulture at the University of Hawaii, thanks to a sizeable contribution from the J R Templin Trust Scholarship, managed by Guardian Trust.

The scholarship was established by an American-born electrical engineer who settled in New Zealand in 1910 and fell in love with both the country and a Kiwi woman. Mr Templin was passionate about engineering and horticulture and set up a charitable trust to support study in the two fields by offering future generations of Kiwi postgraduate students the opportunity to study at a United States university.

Since 1993 the Templin Trust has granted close to $1 million to New Zealand students. Mr Pender has received a total of $31,420 USD from the trust towards his studies, $16,420 USD in 2011 alone.

Guardian Trust’s general manager of personal client services Philip Morgan-Rees says trusts such as the Templin Trust are invaluable to those seeking higher education.

“Guardian Trust continues to manage trusts that have been left by those fortunate enough to be able to do so. The ongoing legacy of many can be seen in the work and research being undertaken by students such as Richard Pender, the latest recipient of the Templin Trust Scholarship.”

A unique clause of the Templin Trust Scholarship states that those who study overseas are to come back to New Zealand and contribute to the industry of their chosen field for two years. Richard Pender is due to complete his studies at the end of this year and says he is looking forward to using the knowledge he gained directly with New Zealand fauna and flora.

“My extensive studies and research at the Manoa Campus in Honolulu at the University of Hawaii have given me a well-rounded understanding of how pollinator and seed disperser loss affects native plants. It is a question that is of global concern, and the questions I am addressing in Hawaii can be directly applied to New Zealand’s flora”.

With Honolulu being one of the United States’ most expensive cities to live in, Mr Pender says the Templin funding is vital to his study.

Daniel Di Somma, the 2010 recipient of the Templin Trust Scholarship, is studying towards a Masters in Electricity Markets at the Illinois Institute of Technology.

He says, “Studying at a college in the United States is an immensely broadening, interesting and fun undertaking, but it’s also an expensive one. The Templin Trust Scholarship has brought the act of studying in the United States within fiscal reach for those interested in horticulture and engineering.”

ENDS

About the Templin Trust Scholarship
J R Templin was born in America and first visited New Zealand in 1905 when he worked on the installation of steam turbines for the Christchurch tramway board. He met his wife in New Zealand and after a brief stint working in Thailand, returned to settle in 1910. He remained here for the rest of his life, and died in 1961.

Mr Templin held a mechanical engineering degree from Ohio State University, and had a strong interest in both engineering and horticulture. He was a member of groups such as the New Zealand Lily Society, the New Zealand Rose Society, and the Christchurch Beautifying Association and the Civic Beautification Committee. He established a charitable trust in his name to support the study of his twin loves by others after his death.

As an American citizen he was keen to promote the study of scholarship recipients at a US university, though this is not essential. A key clause of the trust deed is that those who receive a scholarship are required to return to New Zealand for two years to apply their skills and knowledge here.

About Richard Pender’s study
• He is studying at the Manoa Campus of the University of Hawaii in Honolulu, and conducting preliminary research for a doctoral dissertation;
• The majority of funds received by Mr Pender through the Templin Trust Scholarship will be used to cover tuition and living costs while finishing his PhD;
• His research aims to build an understanding of how plants can reproduce in the absence of their pollinators and what the loss of pollinators might mean for plant species;
• He works specifically with the Hawaiian lobeliads species. Over 120 species have evolved in Hawaii from a single colonising species that is thought to have arrived in Hawaii approximately 13 million years ago.

About Guardian Trust
Guardian Trust has been serving New Zealanders for nearly 130 years and is a market leader in trust & estates and wealth management. As one of New Zealand’s foremost trustee companies, it specialises in asset management and protection, providing wide-ranging advice and expertise in philanthropy, estate planning and administration, financial planning, and personal and corporate trusts.

Guardian Trust is the country’s pre-eminent provider of philanthropic services, administering 460 charitable trusts that provided in excess of $32 million in funding in 2010/2011. In real terms, Guardian Trust has distributed grants on behalf of its clients to more than 530 charities across the country in the last three years alone.

Guardian Trust is a wholly-owned subsidiary of The Trust Company, a leading independent Australian trustee.

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