Data

Australian National Herbarium

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
Lepschi, Brendan
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=https://data.csiro.au/collection/csiro:4642?tab=data DataDownload&rft.title=Australian National Herbarium&rft.identifier=http://hdl.handle.net/102.100.100/9136?index=1&rft.publisher=Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation&rft.description=The Australian National Herbarium, with approximately 1 million preserved plant specimens, is one of the three largest plant collections in Australia. It is unique among the Australian Herbaria in having a national focus for its collections, acquisition and research programs.\r\rThe Australian National Herbarium arose from the amalgamation over the years of several herbaria managed by the Commonwealth Government. These included several CSIRO herbaria, the Forest Research Institute Eucalypt Collection, the Forest Research Institute's Atherton Rainforest Collection, and the Australian National Botanic Gardens Herbarium. The CSIRO's core collection, previously known as 'Herbarium Australiense', was renamed 'Australian National Herbarium' in 1984.\r\rThe Australian National Herbarium is a program of the Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research and a contributor to Australia's Virtual Herbarium.&rft.creator=Lepschi, Brendan &rft.date=2012&rft.edition=v1&rft_rights=CSIRO Data Licence https://research.csiro.au/dap/licences/csiro-data-licence/&rft_rights=Data is accessible online and may be reused in accordance with licence conditions&rft_rights=Specimens in the Australian National Herbarium are jointly owned by partners in the Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research. Access rights: Australian National Herbarium is accessible to researchers only. Loans available only to registered Herbaria. A public reference herbarium is accessible at the Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra.\n\n\n&rft_subject=phylogeography&rft_subject=herbarium&rft_subject=nomenclature&rft_subject=biogeography&rft_subject=phylogeny&rft_subject=taxonomy&rft_subject=evolution&rft_subject=systematics&rft_subject=Biogeography and phylogeography&rft_subject=Evolutionary biology&rft_subject=BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES&rft_subject=Plant and fungus systematics and taxonomy&rft_subject=Speciation and extinction&rft_subject=Evolutionary biology not elsewhere classified&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

Licence & Rights:

Other view details
Other

CSIRO Data Licence
https://research.csiro.au/dap/licences/csiro-data-licence/

Data is accessible online and may be reused in accordance with licence conditions

Specimens in the Australian National Herbarium are jointly owned by partners in the Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research. Access rights: Australian National Herbarium is accessible to researchers only. Loans available only to registered Herbaria. A public reference herbarium is accessible at the Australian National Botanic Gardens, Canberra.\n\n\n

Access:

Open view details

Accessible for free

Contact Information



Full description

The Australian National Herbarium, with approximately 1 million preserved plant specimens, is one of the three largest plant collections in Australia. It is unique among the Australian Herbaria in having a national focus for its collections, acquisition and research programs.\r
\r
The Australian National Herbarium arose from the amalgamation over the years of several herbaria managed by the Commonwealth Government. These included several CSIRO herbaria, the Forest Research Institute Eucalypt Collection, the Forest Research Institute's Atherton Rainforest Collection, and the Australian National Botanic Gardens Herbarium. The CSIRO's core collection, previously known as 'Herbarium Australiense', was renamed 'Australian National Herbarium' in 1984.\r
\r
The Australian National Herbarium is a program of the Centre for Australian National Biodiversity Research and a contributor to Australia's Virtual Herbarium.

Available: 2012-11-12

ACN 633 798 857