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More information about applying for a PVR
When should I apply?
- Do you have a variety? Check first that you actually have a variety (a single plant does not constitute a variety). There is no point in applying until you have successfully propagated a new variety and completed any required selection for uniformity and stability. See What is a Plant Variety Right? for more information.
- Be aware of the time limits. If you have already sold material of the variety you must apply before the time period permitted for prior sales expires. See What is a Plant Variety Right? for more information.
- Be aware of trial closing dates. Some varieties are evaluated by the IPONZ/PVR Office in central growing trials. To ensure your variety is included in the coming season's trials, you must apply by these closing dates:
Ornamentals | |
Roses | Make application by 31 March |
Agricultural crops | |
White clover
| Make application by 15 January |
| Grasses | Make application by 1 February |
Winter cereals | Make aplication by 15 April |
Grass endophytes | Make application by 1 July |
Spring cereals, peas, forage brassicas (spring sown) | Make application by 15 July |
Potatoes | Make application by 1 August |
Forage brassicas (summer sown) | Make application by 1 November |
In the case of agricultural and vegetable varieties you have tested, you will need to time your application so that you will be able to meet the final deadline of 18 months after the date of application for supplying information from the growing trials (see section 16(c)).
How can I claim priority?
Being the first to claim Rights for a new variety is always important, but note that if you post your application, it is officially dated from when your application form, technical questionnaire, fee, and any required seed samples or photographs actually arrive at the IPONZ/PVR Office, NOT from the postage date.
If you have already applied for Rights in another country that belongs to the International Union for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants (UPOV) (see section 29) you may be able to claim priority based on this earlier application. If you wish to do this, complete the relevant priority claim section on the application form.
The advantage of claiming priority is that the date of an overseas application becomes regarded in effect as the application date in New Zealand. This may give you precedence over competitors hoping to protect a similar variety.
Note: If you have made more than one application overseas, you can only claim priority for the first application. Also, you must apply for a New Zealand right within 12 months of the first overseas application if you are to claim priority.
What is “Provisional Protection”?
Provisional Protection gives your variety interim protection “as if the Rights have been granted” while the application is under consideration. It automatically applies once your application has been accepted and ceases when the Commissioner issues or refuses a grant. If you have released your variety into the market, you are entitled to take legal proceedings under this interim protection against any person or organisation you consider is infringing your Rights.
There is however an important condition: if the Rights are eventually refused, the Provisional Protection becomes void from the start, or in other words was never of value.
What does Provisional Protection mean in practical terms?
If you can readily identify and distinguish the new variety and you are reasonably certain that Plant Variety Rights will be granted, you should with confidence be able to sell reproductive material of the new variety knowing that you can to take effective legal action to protect your interests against any infringements.
However, if you cannot readily identify the variety or doubt it is eligible for Rights, then Provisional Protection is of questionable value. It might be wise to wait for the Commissioner’s final decision before marketing the variety.
What seed must I send?
Include the specified seed sample with your application for any of the plants listed below. It is in your interest to ensure that the seed sample accurately represents the variety you will supply in commerce and is the highest grade possible with regard to the number of generations required to achieve genotypic and phenotypic stability for that species. Note that seed from the earliest stage breeding multiplications is often not suitable and may not represent the commercial variety in later generations.
Because the submitted seed sample will be used both in trial comparisons and to provide the definitive description for that variety, we recommend you supply a sample equivalent to certified "Basic" generation.
Seed should also be fresh and of the highest possible viability. The table below gives the minimum germination level required. Please also supply a germination test certificate (including a vigour test in the case of peas) no more than three months old. The seed also must:
- not have been subject to any chemical treatment
- be free of disease and insect contamination
- meets basic seed standards for purity.
For grass species the seed submitted for DUS testing must be endophyte free. Endophyte free is defined as having a level of endophyte present in the seed sample of no more than five percent. Should the submitted new seed sample not be determined free of endophyte, a second seed sample will be required to be submitted.
All submitted seed samples supplied at application and any additional seed requested for DUS testing will be subject to random testing for the presence of endophyte.
Kind of plant | Seed (g) | No of ears | Minimum germination % |
Arable crops and vegetables | |||
Peas | 3000 | 90* | |
Barley, oats, ryecorn, tritcale and wheat | 2000 | 100 | 90 |
Beans, lentils, lupins and maize | 2000 | 90 | |
Linseed | 1000 | 90 | |
Sunflower | 1000 | 85 | |
Beets | 500 | 85 | |
Asparagus | 100 | 90 | |
Borage | 100 | 70 | |
Cucurbits | 100 | Contact IPONZ/PVRO | |
Allium, amaranthus and phacelia | 50 | 85 | |
Capsicum and radish | 50 | Contact IPONZ/PVRO | |
Chicory | 50 | 60 | |
Forage brassicas | 50 | 90 | |
Brassicas (other than forage brassicas) | 30 | 90 | |
Carrot, lettuce, parsnip and tomato | 30 | Contact IPONZ/PVRO | |
Evening primrose | 10 | 75 | |
Grasses | |||
Brome | 500 | 75 | |
Ryegrass | 500 | 85 | |
Cocksfoot, crested dogstail, fescue, koeleria and paspalum | 50 | 75 | |
Bents and yorkshire fog | 10 | 90 | |
Phalaris | 10 | 70 | |
Other pasture plants | |||
Serradella and sulla | 100 | 85** | |
Plantain | 50 | 90 | |
Lotus, lucerne and red clover | 50 | 85** | |
Yarrow | 25 | 85 | |
White clover | 10 | 85** | |
* Also vigour (conductivity) must not exceed 24 microsiemens/g
** Includes hard seed
Note | All seed samples must be supplied to AsureQuality, South Drive, Lincoln University, Canterbury. All samples must be clearly labelled with the name of the variety and for PVR purposes only.
