University of Otago Magazine, Vol. 38, ‘Whatever happened to the Herbarium?’
Creator
Date
June, 2014
Identifier
Botany Department, University of Otago
Publisher
University of Otago
Abstract
A herbarium or ‘library of plants’ contains dried and preserved specimens of plants, fungi, algae (seaweeds) and bryophytes (mosses and liverworts). The Otago Regional Herbarium, housed within the main building of the Botany Department, was established by Professor Geoff Baylis in the 1950s. The collection continues to expand, with some 70,000 specimens now in the Herbarium and it continues to play an important role in the Department. It provides an important historical record (the oldest specimen dates from the 1880s), and is vital for use in teaching and research. The largest herbarium in the world is housed at the Natural History Museum in Paris and has 9,500,000 specimens.
Files
Citation
Karen Hogg, “University of Otago Magazine, Vol. 38, ‘Whatever happened to the Herbarium?’,” ourheritage.ac.nz | OUR Heritage, accessed November 16, 2024, https://otago.ourheritage.ac.nz/index.php/items/show/8711.