Howard, P.2016-04-192016-04-192003IIED Gatekeeper Series No. 1121357-92583126_GK112.pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10919/67277Due to women's assigned tasks and roles, women have developed specific knowledge of plants. Women are plant breeders, seed custodian, and gather plants for medicinal, culinary, fuel, crafts, construction, and fodder purposes. The plant use, management, and conservation occur within the household which makes this knowledge invisible and undervalued by the outsider. This fact creates gender biases in research, and scientific knowledge, which in turn affects the impact of projects and policies. Traditional knowledge and indigenous rights to plants are not gender neutral. In order to achieve sustainable conservation of biological diversity one needs to pay greater attention to gender. It is important to recognize the role women play in transmitting traditional knowledge and practices. Also, it is important to recognize indigenous rights and women's rights to plants and land resources.application/pdfen-USIn CopyrightPlantsBiodiversityWomenIndigenous communityAgrobiodiversityLocal knowledgeGenderPlant variety protectionBiodiversity conservationGenderGender biasPlant conservationBiological diversityPlant biodiversityTraditional knowledgeField ScaleThe major importance of 'minor' resources: Women and plant biodiversityTechnical report