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Funding Crisis Hits Costa
Rican Biodiversity Institute
An ambitious effort to catalogue
all the species living in Costa
Rica and find sustainable ways
of exploiting them is under
threat because funds are running
out.
Last month, the National
Biodiversity Institute (INBio)
began terminating contracts for
one-third of the 50 researchers
tasked with describing and
recording the nation's rich
biodiversity.
The institute, set up in 1989,
had been hailed as one of the
first to champion the economic
importance of conserving
biodiversity.
INBio also tried to be
self-sufficient. It set up
pioneering deals with
pharmaceutical companies looking
for new chemicals in wild
species, which brought in
royalties. Many of INBio's
projects now fund themselves.
But 90 per cent of the inventory
programme's budget came from two
seven-year grants that will run
out by the end of 2005.
Most job losses are in the
institute's insect department,
considered one of the best
collections of specimens in
Latin America.
INBio officials hope that the
setback is temporary and that
staff will be rehired by 2007.
But observers say that the
institute's managers were not
aggressive enough in pursuing
funding. They say INBio — which
is a non-governmental
organisation — needs either
government funding or a
multi-million dollar endowment
to secure the future of its
inventory programme.
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