Progress Accompanies Organization's Monumental Call to Action: Join Collective Initiative to Biobank Every Endangered Species by 2075
SAN DIEGO, Oct. 11, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance has for the first time unveiled milestone progress in its effort to facilitate the development of a network of globally distributed biobanks. Announced today at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Abu Dhabi, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance is on a mission to protect the future of our planet's biodiversity by helping grow biobanking capacity worldwide—starting with pilot sites in four biodiversity hotspots: Kenya, Vietnam, Hawai'i, and Peru. The non-profit organization has called on conservation champions, organizations, and global partners to join in its ambitious and urgent initiative that cannot be done alone: to biobank every endangered species by 2075.
"Advances in science and technology bring us hope and these innovations have brought us here today. We have a call to action – to biobank all endangered species worldwide by 2075," Dr. Nadine Lamberski, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance's chief conservation and wildlife health officer, said at a press conference. "And we can't do this alone. Our delegation has one clear message: join us in this commitment. Together, we can drive a movement to save wildlife and the ecosystems we depend on, and raise awareness about the critical tool we can use to accomplish this: biodiversity biobanking."
As a proud partner of the IUCN Species Survival Commission as a Center for Species Survival focused on biodiversity banking, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance is working collaboratively to advance biobanking initiatives and drive global progress in safeguarding biodiversity. To reach its goal, the non-profit organization is doing its part by ensuring other conservationists around the world are equitably equipped with the knowledge and tools needed to develop biobanking programs in-country. Each location has different needs, and varying degrees of existing infrastructure that can support biobanking. Calling on its decades of experience, San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance is supporting each area accordingly with a tailored combination of the following:
This announcement marks the 50th anniversary of San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance's groundbreaking Frozen Zoo®—a pioneering biobank that has safeguarded the viable genetic material of endangered species for half a century. Established in 1975, the Frozen Zoo holds the most extensive repository of living wildlife materials on Earth. From its inception, this collection was designed as a resource for the entire world, and it continues to serve the global community today.
San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance recently held its inaugural Frozen Zoo Symposium which welcomed global partners in person and virtually, broadcasting to 15 countries. The event included a cell culture training workshop that hosted participants from six countries, providing more inclusive access to biobanking knowledge and training.
San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance (SDZWA) and partners have made significant headway in the establishment of four pilot sites for biobanking. Milestones in each region so far include:
"The world has reached a pivotal moment. Nature is in crisis. The loss of biodiversity is occurring at a speed and scale that is outpacing our ability to get out in front and halt the decline of species. The health of wildlife, people, and the ecosystems we depend on are at risk," Lamberski emphasized. "We must take bold steps to save the health of our planet."
PHOTOS AND VIDEOS: sdzwa.org/PR/Global-Biobanking-Network
CONTACT: | San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance |
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SOURCE San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance