Scion (Crown Research Institute)


Scion, a company officially registered as New Zealand Forest Research Institute Limited, is a New Zealand Crown Research Institute. Scion specialises in research, science and technology development for the forestry, wood product, wood-derived materials, and other biomaterial sectors.
Scion is the lead CRI in
Scion collaborates with other research providers and end-users to develop:
Scion makes its plant collection data available online as part of the Australasian Virtual Herbarium.
The name “scion” refers to a cutting or shoot used to form a graft.2
It is wholly owned by the New Zealand government and constituted as a limited liability company under the New Zealand Companies Act 1993.

Main research areas

Staff undertake work in the fields of
Scion's purpose is to drive innovation and growth from these sectors to build economic value and contribute to beneficial environmental and social outcomes for New Zealand.3 This is achieved through providing research, technology and knowledge in partnership with industry, government and Māori stakeholders, working in the following areas:
Commercial forestry
Scion is working to maximise the value and productivity of New Zealand's commercial forests, by:
Wood products and processing
The competitiveness of the solid wood processing industry is improved by Scion's work to:
Wood fibre, pulp, biopolymer and biochemical industries
Scion is expanding New Zealand's opportunities for using wood fibres, biopolymers and biochemical by developing:
Risk and adaptation
New Zealand's ability to manage risks associated with biosecurity, fire and climate change has been improved by Scion's work with government agencies, forest growers and science collaborators nationally and internationally to:
Licence to operate
Through targeted research aimed at enhancing environmental performance, Scion protects the New Zealand forest industry's licence to operate domestically and internationally by:
Bioenergy
Scion:
Scion is home to databases and collections of national and international importance.
They are widely used to support diagnostic services, research, and the development of industry standards.
National Forest Culture Collection
This is an internationally registered living collection of almost 3000 fungal specimens stored in culture. Some pathogenic fungi from overseas are stored in a containment facility.
National Forest Mycological Herbarium
This internationally registered collection comprises almost 2000 dried fungal specimens and plant material containing fungi. The earliest collections date back to the late 1800s from Sweden.
National Forestry Herbarium and Database
The herbarium contains plants significant to plantation and indigenous forestry in New Zealand, including a wide range of native and amenity species. 
National Forestry Library
Publications and media relating to forestry and wood processing research over the last 75 years are held in the National Forestry Library at Scion. The library contains one of the largest collections of forestry, forest products, biomaterials, and pulp and paper literature in the Southern Hemisphere.
Wood collection
An extensive xylarium – a collection of wood samples consisting thousands of species from all over the world - is cared for at Scion. This collection can be used to compare samples with unknown timbers.
Permanent Sample Plots database
Scion's Permanent Sample Plot system is a comprehensive database of forest growth data that underpins New Zealand's commercial forest industry. The system contains information about the effect factors such as environment, genetics and silviculture regimes have on the growth of stands and trees.
The PSP system holds data from the 1920s, and has been in a digital format since the early 1960s. The digital platform is a flexible relational database that holds different types of forest data for both experimental research and commercial growth plots. These data are sourced from permanent sample plots that have been established, and regularly measured, in different forest types throughout New Zealand. In 2017, the system holds data from 32,000 PSPs of which 11,500 are current and 20,500 historic records. The PSP system is one of the most extensive data resources on tree growth, internationally.4
Scientists and forest companies use this information to understand how current forests are performing, and how future forests might grow under different conditions. These data support important forest management decisions.

Scion Nursery

The 10 hectare nursery in Rotorua has shade houses, controlled climate propagation facilities, commercial bare-root operations and a large purpose-built container-growing operation. The facility can on-grow 700,000 seedlings a year and is used for both research and commercial sales.
The work includes:
Scion is the trading name for New Zealand Forest Research Institute Limited. The head office and main campus is in Rotorua on a site that was once the headquarters for a forest nursery for a large government afforestation programme. The nursery was established in 1898 at the edge of Whakarewarewa Forest where more than 60 exotic species were planted on 5000 hectares to determine which species grew best in New Zealand conditions.
Research commenced on the campus in 1947 as a government-owned Forest Experiment Station. In 1949 it was renamed the Forest Research Institute under the auspices of the New Zealand Forest Service.
In 1992 it was established as one of New Zealand's Crown Research Institutes as part of the government of the day's science restructuring.
In 2005 the trading name Scion was adopted.

Locations

Scion employs approximately 300 full-time equivalent staff, with its principal campus the main part of the Te Papa Tipu Innovation Park in Rotorua. It also has an office in Christchurch with close to 30 staff, as well as smaller offices in Wellington and Dunedin.