Green Theory Studio Symbiota Demo Natural History Collections and Observation Projects

RSS feed: https://greentheorystudio.net:443/symbiota-democollections/datasets/rsshandler.php

NY

New York Botanical Garden

The National Science Foundation has announced a new grant to provide funding for a nationwide, publicly accessible database of mushrooms and related fungi. Including mushrooms, porcini, puffballs, club fungi, conks, morels, stinkhorns, truffles and cup fungi, these organisms play a critical role in the lives of plants and animals, including humans. Some are gastronomical delights, others are deadly poisonous, and all serve as nature’s recyclers, returning nutrients to the soil through decomposition. Scientists in the U.S. have been studying macrofungi for the past 150 years, resulting in a legacy of approximately 1.4 million dried scientific specimens conserved in 35 institutions in 24 states. Through this project, led by Drs. Barbara M. Thiers and Roy E. Halling of The New York Botanical Garden, these treasures will be virtually liberated from their museum cabinets and shared on-line through the Mycology Collections Portal and through many other on-line collections databases such as The Garden’s Virtual Herbarium. The database created by this project will enable a national census of these critically important organisms, and allow researchers to better understand the relationship between macrofungi and other organisms.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 29 November 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File


S

Swedish Museum of Natural History

This collection contains about 32 000 species and 370 000 specimens. Important collections: G. Bresadola E. Rehm P. and H. Sydow (before 1919) P. Hennings L. Romell P. Dietel
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 15 October 2018
Digital Metadata: EML File


ILL

University of Illinois Herbarium

Illinois, midwestern U.S., Apiaceae, Asteraceae, Fabaceae: Mimosoideas, fossils of Pennsylvanian age coal balls, fungi (especially Meliolales: Ascomycetes and resupinate Basidiomycetes), 19th and early 20th century exsiccatae.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


NEB

University of Nebraska State Museum, C.E. Bessey Herbarium

The Bessey Herbarium was founded in 1874, making it among the oldest in the Great Plains states of Colorado, Kansas, Montana, North Dakota, and Nebraska. The collection has more than 310,000 specimens, placing it among the largest in the Great Plains. The largest parts of the collection are, in descending order, from Nebraska, the Great Plains, the Rocky Mountains, other parts of North America, and Europe. It contains important collections by such scientifically notable Nebraskans as Charles Bessey, Ernst Bessey, Frederic Clements, Walter Kiener, Per Rydberg, Raymond Pool, Jared G. Smith; by other Nebraskans who later became prominent in other fields, such as Roscoe Pound (Law), Louise Pound (Literature), Willa Cather (Literature), Melvin Gilmore (Ethnobotany), Lawrence Bruner (Entomology) and Henry Baldwin Ward (Parasitology), and by many prominent scientists from outside the state.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


WIS

University of Wisconsin-Madison Herbarium

The University of Wisconsin-Madison Herbarium, founded in 1849, is a museum collection of dried, labeled fungi of state, national and international importance, which is used extensively for taxonomic and ecological research, as well as for teaching and public service. Today WIS is estimated to hold >1.2 million specimens of algae, fungi, lichens, and plants, placing it among the top 1% of the world’s largest herbarium. It is ranked 17th largest in the world outside of Europe, 11th largest in the Western Hemisphere, 10th largest in the USA, and the 3rd largest public university herbarium in the Americas.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


ASU-Plants

Arizona State University Vascular Plant Herbarium

The Arizona State University Vascular Plant Herbarium is the second largest in the Arid Southwest with over 285,000 specimens. Our collection of Cactaceae is one of the best in the world, being particularly rich in cytological vouchers.

ASU Type Specimens: http://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/checklists/checklist.php?cl=2638

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-RD

BLM Herbarium - Redding FO

Our collection represents a portion of the plants in the upper Sacramento Valley and Shasta Cascades region of Northern California. Plants are collected on land managed by the Bureau of Land Management Redding Field Office. Redding BLM herbarium's main focus is vascular plants, however some non-vascular plants have been collected. The Redding BLM office covers many different types of ecosystems that range from ecosystems with serpentine soils to wetlands and vernal pools. Collections range back to the 1960s; about 1,000 collections have been made.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BRY-V

Brigham Young University, S. L. Welsh Herbarium

Note: We reorganized our image file structure on our server out of necessity; most specimen images will not be viewable until a solution for remapping images is developed.

Vascular Plants. The herbarium has completed databasing the non-seed vascular plants, gymnosperms, and most monocots (still working on the grasses). Dicots are an ongoing effort; they are only complete for select groups and recently cataloged material. Some records that are incomplete, duplicate sheets, or that otherwise need additional attention may not be uploaded for searching here.

The herbarium at BYU is recognized by the Index Herbariorum acronym 'BRY'. 'V' indicates the vascular plant portion of BRY housed in the S.L. Welsh Herbarium. The S.L. Welsh herbarium also houses a smaller collection gifted to Brigham Young University from the Ogden Forest Service, which maintains its Index Herbariorum acronym 'OGDF'. BRY also encompasses the Herbarium of Non-Vascular Cryptogams (including lichenized fungi), which is administered independently and curated by Steven Leavitt and emeritus curator Larry L. St.Clair.

Information made available here electronically, including specimen data and images, has been produced by support from Brigham Young University, NSF grant DBI–1203616, the Grand Canyon Trust, and a Utah-BLM Challenge Cost-Share agreement. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of our herbarium and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation or other supporting agencies.

Please acknowledge the use of BRY/OGDF specimens in publications or products that have benefitted from the use of these data.

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 1 January 2019
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Brigham Young University


BRIT

BRIT Philecology Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Botanical Research Institute of Texas


BRU

Brown University Herbarium

The Brown University Herbarium was founded in 1869 when the University acquired the collections of the Providence Franklin Society and Stephen Thayer Olney. The collection includes around 100,000 plant specimens and is an important depository of Rhode Island and New England collections. It is also rich in western and southern North American plants and includes special sets of historically valuable specimens from 19th and early 20th century western US expeditions. Among other important collections, the herbarium also includes a full set of Charles Wright’s Cuban plants (1856-1867) and a unique and classic collection of Carex. Click here to download a pdf brochure describing the herbarium.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 26 July 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Brown University


BLM-CFO

Bureau of Land Management, Carlsbad Field Office

The Carlsbad Field Office administers over 2 million acres of surface estate and 3 million acres of mineral estate in the southeastern portion of New Mexico. The Field Office is located within the extent of the Permian Basin, a prolific oil basin in the United States, and one of the oldest oil fields in the nation, having been in operation since the 1920s. There are many recreational opportunities in the rolling limestone foothills of the Guadalupe Mountains and the rugged Chihuahuan Desert environment.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-LCDO

Bureau of Land Management, Las Cruces District Office

The Las Cruces District Office manages land in Doña Ana, Grant, Luna, Otero, and Sierra counties in southwestern New Mexico. We maintain a reference collection, primarily of plants found on BLM land within the district, to aid plant identification in the office and document some of our activities.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-SLV

Bureau of Land Management, San Luis Valley Field Office

The Herbarium of the San Luis Valley Field Office is a collection of primarily range land plants collected on BLM lands in Southern Colorado, with a focus on the San Luis Valley. The San Luis Valley is a high elevation, intermontane desert valley at the headwaters of the Rio Grande River.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 9 February 2016
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-TAFO

Bureau of Land Management, Taos Field Office

The Taos Field Office manages federal lands in Colfax, Harding, Rio Arriba, San Miguel, Santa Fe and Taos counties in northern New Mexico. We maintain a reference collection, primarily of plants found on BLM land within the district, to aid plant identification in the office and document some of our activities.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-CFOBLM

Caliente Field Office, Bureau of Land Management

The Caliente Field Office BLM manages approximately 750 herbarium specimens primarily collected from the Mojave and Mojave-Great Basin transition zone of Lincoln County, Nevada.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Bureau of Land Management


CM

Carnegie Museum of Natural History Herbarium

The Carnegie Museum herbarium (CM) has over 530,000 worldwide vascular plant specimens as well as the best representation in any herbarium of specimens from western Pennsylvania and the Upper Ohio Basin. CM holds the private herbarium of Hannibal and Tyrecca Davis containing 20,000 specimens with a concentration on Rubus (Rosaceae).
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 3 January 2019
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Carnegie Museum of Natural History


BLM-CAR

Carson City District BLM Herbarium

BLMCAR is housed in a Bureau of Land Management office in Carson City, Nevada, USA, and is not accessible to the public. Specimens housed in this herbarium are mostly vouchers for seed collections made in western Nevada and adjacent areas of California. The phone number and email address provided are those of Dean Tonenna, a BLM staff botanist and curator of this herbarium.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Bureau of Land Management
Access Rights: Public Domain


ASU-CCH

Cochise County Herbarium - Arizona State University

Recently transferred to ASU Herbarium.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


CS

Colorado State University Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 9 January 2012
Digital Metadata: EML File


ASC

Deaver Herbarium (Northern Arizona University)

Number of Specimens: 120,000 Specialty: Colorado Plateau, especially northern Arizona; northeastern Mojave Desert; northern Arizona National Parks and Monuments; vascular plants of the San Francisco Peaks and Coconino National Forest. Important Collections: M. Baker; R. E. Collom; C. F. Deaver; D. Demaree; R. K. Gierisch; L. N. Goodding; G. Goodwin; H. D. Hammond; R. H. Hevly; M. E. Jones; T. H. Kearney; Max Licher; E. L. Little, Jr.; V. O. Mayes; A. M. Phillips; G. R. Rink; C. G. Schaack; J. J. Thornber; A. F. Whiting. Incorporated Herbaria: FSLF (1000 specimens) in 1989. Notes: Name for Arizona State College changed to Northern Arizona University in 1966. ASC fungi transferred to MICH in 1998. ASC is temporarily housing NAVA, until the Navajo Natural Heritage builds a new building. Date Founded: 1930.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Deaver Herbarium


DUKE

Duke University

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-ELKOBLM

Elko BLM District Office Herbarium

The Elko District Office houses approximately 1200 herbarium specimens collected from northern Nevada’s Great Basin with emphasis on Elko and Eureka counties. Historic collections date back to three specimens from 1915 by S. B. Arthur (1) and Bryant S. Martineu (2), respectively. Other noteworthy collectors represented include Mont E. Lewis and Arnold Tiehm.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Access Rights: Public domain


F-Botany

Field Museum of Natural History

Phanerogams worldwide with emphasis on tropical and North America, especially rich in collections from Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Peru; pteridophytes worldwide with emphasis on Guatemala, Costa Rica, Ecuador, and Peru; bryophytes worldwide; mosses of North America, Central America, Andean South America, and Australasia; hepatics of north temperate, South America, and south temperate; all groups of fungi, especially basidiomycetes with emphasis on New World and lichenized fungi of north temperate and Central America; algae worldwide, especially Cyanobacteria; economic botany.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 2 January 2019
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File
Access Rights: http://fieldmuseum.org/about/copyright-information


GAS

Georgia Southern University Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 6 December 2018
Digital Metadata: EML File


IND

Indiana University Herbarium (Deam Herbarium)

The Department of Biology administers the Indiana University Herbarium (IND). Founded in 1885, the herbarium houses over 152,000 specimens of vascular plants, including the collections of Charles C. Deam on which the Flora of Indiana is based.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: The Trustees of Indiana University


USU-UTC

Intermountain Herbarium (Utah State University)

Records in this database are of the vascular plants in the Intermountain Herbarium. Records for fungi, lichens and bryophytes are now being posted to the taxon-specific networks. The geographic focus of the Intermountain Herbarium is the Intermountain Region of western North America but its holdings come from many different countries. It even has one or more specimens from each of the seven continents. The collection is particularly rich in the Scrophulariaceae (traditional sense) and grasses, including voucher specimens of plants used by by the late D.R. Dewey in his cytogenetic studies of the Triticeae.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Utah State University


MUHW

Marshall University

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


UNCC

Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 3 January 2019
Digital Metadata: EML File


MU

Miami University, Willard Sherman Turrell Herbarium

Miami University is the home of Ohio's largest herbarium, the Willard Sherman Turrell Herbarium. The herbarium's holdings of approximately 620,000 specimens are worldwide in both geographical and taxonomic coverage. The collection consists of 330,000 vascular plant specimens, as well as 140,000 bryophytes, 100,000 fungi, 35,000 lichens, 10,000 algae, and 5,000 fossil plants. There are several thousand type specimens contained in the collection, as well as many sets of cryptogamic exsiccatae. Active exchange programs are ongoing with many herbaria worldwide to ensure the continued breadth and depth of the collection. The W.S. Turrell Herbarium Fund is an endowment which benefits the herbarium, and is restricted to support of the research activities of the staff and students in systematic botany.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


MISSA

Mississippi State University

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


MO

Missouri Botanical Garden

Plants are essential to sustaining the stability and quality of human life on this planet. At the Missouri Botanical Garden, we have dedicated ourselves to helping conserve biological diversity while there is still something left to protect. Our research provides scientific information essential to decision makers, from conservation and land use to social and environmental policy. We have taken the lead in making information widely accessible via the Internet, maintaining the world's largest botanical database and the premier botanical website, TROPICOS. Garden scientists conduct the most productive and geographically widespread botanical research program in the world. A tiny sample of its herbarium records are presented here; providing more will require funding.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 29 November 2017
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Missouri Botanical Garden


NY

New York Botanical Garden

With more than 7.8 million preserved specimens, the William and Lynda Steere Herbarium is the largest herbarium in the Western Hemisphere.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 21 June 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File


NCSC

North Carolina State University Vascular Plant Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


OS

Ohio State University Herbarium

The Ohio State University Herbarium (OS) is a major collection of plant and fungal specimens and is a unit of the Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology. We are part of OSU's Museum of Biological Diversity. Since its founding in 1891, the collection has grown to approximately half a million specimens and has worldwide coverage, with strengths in flora of the northeastern United States (especially Ohio) and in temperate South America. The Herbarium supports research and teaching at OSU and receives frequent use by researchers from other academic institutions, as well as by staff from governmental agencies such as the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


RSABG-RSA-POM

Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden Herbarium

The combined Herbarium of Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden and Pomona College (RSA-POM) is a museum-quality collection of vascular plant specimens. With current holdings totaling over 1,200,000 specimens, the Herbarium is the third largest in California. The Herbarium is recognized throughout the world for its strength in documenting the diversity, distribution, variation, and ecology of more than 6500 species of flowering plants, conifers, and ferns in California, which constitutes nearly 50% of the total collection. The holdings from Southern California exceed 250,000 and are unsurpassed by any other herbarium. Approximately 95% of the collection is composed of mounted sheets and filed according to a standardized system of classification. Ancillary collections that augment the collection include a cone & fruit collection, wood collection, fluid preserved collection, and pollen and anatomy slide collection.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 21 September 2018
Digital Metadata: EML File


RM

Rocky Mountain Herbarium

Founded in 1893 by Aven Nelson, the Rocky Mountain Herbarium (RM) contains the largest collection of Rocky Mountain plants and fungi in existence with additional representation of the floras of other parts of the Northern Hemisphere. It ranks 17th in the nation with 825,000 specimens [with approximately 25,000 new specimens added each year] and is the largest facility of its kind between St. Louis, Missouri, and Berkeley, California
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 20 May 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File


SDSU

San Diego State University

The San Diego State University Herbarium (SDSU) is a depository of over 20,000 pressed and mounted plant specimens used in research and teaching. The purpose of these specimens is: 1) to serve as voucher documentation for research projects; 2) to serve as imglib for plant identification; and 3) to serve as exemplars in plant courses. In addition, the herbarium both receives and provides loans of plant specimens used in active systematic research. The herbarium collection specializes in land plant specimens from San Diego County, California, and Baja California, with some collections from Australia, Chile, and the south Pacific.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 27 December 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File


SDSU-SDC

South Dakota State University (C. A. Taylor) Herbarium

The SDSU Herbarium dates back to 1881 and the foundation of South Dakota College. The herbarium was designated the C. A. Taylor Herbarium in 1994 to honor Charles Arthur Taylor, Jr. who dedicated 40 years of his life to its maintenance and growth. A significant part of the herbarium is the many collections "Charlie" Taylor brought with him from the Ithaca, NY area and elsewhere. The herbarium at SDSU has grown to >60,000 accessions due largely to more recent floristic studies focused on such areas as the Black Hills National Forest, the Fort Pierre and Grand River National Grasslands, and wetlands of the Prairie Pothole Region. We are in the early stages of specimen digitization, with >15,000 databased (none imaged) thus far.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: South Dakota State University

Tulane Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


BLM-UI

Uinta BLM Herbarium

The Uinta Herbarium houses about 7,000 specimens from northeastern Utah and the Uinta Basin, mostly from BLM-managed lands within the Vernal Field Office. The Uinta Herbarium was founded in the mid-1970’s. Specimens are typically collected and used by BLM staff and other local users.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: Bureau of Land Management
Access Rights: Public Domain


ALA

University of Alaska Museum

The Herbarium (ALA) at the University of Alaska Museum is the major regional herbarium in Alaska and part of a network of similar collections with an interest in the origin and evolution of the circumpolar flora. ALA contains more than 260,000 specimens of vascular and non-vascular plants. Data for the Vascular Plant and Cryptogam collections are managed separately in Arctos. Much of our understanding of Ice Age Beringia is based on botanical specimens, the largest collection of which is housed at ALA. Our recent acquisition from Iowa State University of the J. P. Anderson Collection (32,000 specimens on permanent loan) forms a significant part of this story. This collection of arctic and boreal plants, which contains 67 nomenclatural type specimens, formed the basis for much of Anderson's seminal work, The Flora of Alaska. The botanical collection also includes plants from other states, Canada, Greenland, Fennoscandia, Japan, and Russia and provides a basis for teaching and research. Our botanical collection can be viewed and searched through the Arctos database and includes high resolution images of 163,000 herbarium sheets, online representation of 190,000 holdings, and inclusion of all holdings in an object-tracking system (barcode labeling).
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 13 June 2016
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File


ARIZ

University of Arizona Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 26 October 2018
Digital Metadata: EML File


FLAS

University of Florida Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 18 July 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: University of Florida


GA

University of Georgia Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 4 January 2019
Digital Metadata: EML File


MICH

University of Michigan Herbarium

Specialty: Worldwide, especially temperate North America and the Great Lakes region. Specific strengths include marine algae of eastern North America, West Indies, Alaska, and Pacific Islands; bryophytes of tropical America; Agaricaceae and Hymenogastraceae of western North America; vascular plants of Mexico, Iran, Himalayas, southwestern Pacific Region, and southeastern Asia; Cyperaceae, Malpighiaceae, and Myrtaceae of the New World.
Date Founded: 1837.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


RENO-V

University of Nevada Herbarium

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


UNM-Vascular Plants

University of New Mexico Herbarium

The Museum of Southwestern Biology houses New Mexico’s largest herbarium. Our focus is mainly to document and preserve a record of the flora of the state. We have 130,000 specimens; most are from New Mexico and the southwestern U.S. Our primary international holdings are from Mexico. As the fifth largest state we are relatively unexplored and species new to science are still being discovered, documented, and described. Our specimens represent over 7700 species and serve as a reference for what’s been documented within our region.
Additional UNM Collections:
Bryophyte Collection within the CNABH Portal
Lichen Collection within the CNALH Portal
Mycological Collection within the MycoPortal
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


NCU

University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Herbarium

The University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Herbarium (NCU) is a Department of the North Carolina Botanical Garden of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The vascular plant collection is world-wide in scope, and focuses on the native flora of the Southeastern United States. Approximately 450,000 of our ca. 600,000 specimens will be imaged & databased for THE KEY TO THE CABINETS: BUILDING & SUSTAINING A RESEARCH DATABASE FOR A GLOBAL BIODIVERSITY HOTSPOT. NCU also curates plant fossils (esp. Devonian and collections of Patricia Gensel), fungi (esp. collections of W.C. Coker, J.N. Couch, A. B. Seymour), lichens (esp. collections of Gary Perlmutter), bryophytes, and algae (esp. red marine algae of temperate zones and collections of Max Hommersand & Paul Gabrielson). NCU is open to the public & welcomes researchers; contact Curator to reserve on-campus parking permit.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


ISTC

University of Northern Iowa, Grant Herbarium

ISTC contains ca. 47200 accessioned specimens, these mainly from Iowa but with substantial holdings from the American West, especially Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah. Many duplicates of the collections of Martin Grant from Iran are also present.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File
Rights Holder: University of Northern Iowa


USCH

University of South Carolina, A. C. Moore Herbarium

The A. C. Moore Herbarium is an important part of the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of South Carolina (Columbia Campus). Founded in 1907 by Dr. Andrew Charles Moore, the original collection of dried plant specimens is now part of an ever growing collection. Total holdings are just over 120,000 specimens, making the A. C. Moore Herbarium the largest in the state of South Carolina. Researchers and visitors will find a diverse collection of vascular and nonvascular plant material primarily from the Southeastern United States and more specifically from South Carolina. Now over 100 years old, the A. C. Moore Herbarium continues to be an indispensable resource for botanical knowledge.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 18 December 2018
Digital Metadata: EML File


USF

University of South Florida Herbarium

The USF Herbarium was established as a research and teaching collection in 1958 by George R. Cooley, two years after the founding of the University of South Florida. The USF Herbarium is the second largest collection in Florida, the seventh largest in the southeastern United States, and ranks in the upper third of the world's herbaria in size. The herbarium contains approximately 280,000 specimens, consisting of about 260,000 specimens of vascular plants, 14,000 algae, 2,800 bryophytes, 1,300 lichens, and 300 macrofungi. The collection contains approximately 400 type specimens. The herbarium is richest in specimens from Florida (~40%), with additional holdings from North America north of Mexico (~35%), Latin America and the West Indies (~15%), and the Eastern Hemisphere (~10%). Specific groups well represented in the herbarium include Acanthaceae, Apocynaceae, Begoniaceae, Bromeliaceae, Fabaceae, Orchidaceae, and pteridophytes (ferns).
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 31 March 2018
Digital Metadata: EML File


WIS

University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin State Herbarium

The Wisconsin State Herbarium (WIS), formerly known as the University of Wisconsin-Madison Herbarium, was founded in 1849, and is a scientific collection of pressed, dried, labeled, and classified plants and fungi. It also preserves notes, illustrations, and other material about plants, and it maintains its own valuable Herbarium Library. The collection of more than 1.2 million specimens is of regional, national, and international importance. Approximately one-fourth of its vascular plant specimens are from Wisconsin, all of which have been databased and are searchable online. In addition, most of the world's floras are well represented, and the holdings from certain areas such as the Upper Midwest, eastern North America, western Mexico, and the Arctic (primarily lichens) are widely recognized as imglib of global significance. The herbarium occupies two floors of the east wing of historic Birge Hall at the top of Bascom Hill on the UW-Madison campus. In addition to its specimen holdings, visitors to WIS have access to high-quality microscopes, an extensive library of books, reprints and maps, computer workstations, and internet connections for personal computers. WIS serves as the state of Wisconsin's official repository of plant specimen vouchers, and is actively engaged in educating students and sharing our passion for plants with the public. The faculty, staff, and students associated with the herbarium are engaged in a variety of local, regional, national, and international efforts to document, showcase, and protect plant diversity.
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


ASU-Seeds

Arizona State University Fruit and Seed Collection

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


ASU-Pollen

Arizona State University Pollen Collection

Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File


SEINet

General Research Observations

This is a collection of general image supported observations submitted by general SEINet users.
Collection Type: General Observations
Management: Live Data managed directly within data portal
Global Unique Identifier: ---SYMBIOTA-DEV-DB-COLLECTION-GUID---
Live Data Download: Login for access
Digital Metadata: EML File