National Herbarium of the Netherlands explained

The National Herbarium of the Netherlands (Dutch: Nationaal Herbarium Nederland) is one of largest herbaria in the world with some 5.5 million specimens. It was established in through a decentralized merger of the major university herbaria of Leiden (also known as the Rijksherbarium), Utrecht and Wageningen. Each of the three had its own focus.

The National Herbarium currently consists of two branches:

The Utrecht herbarium has been closed and in 2009 its stock was transferred to Leiden, where it is curated by the Naturalis Biodiversity Centre. It is planned that Naturalis (the Netherlands' Natural History Museum and Centre for Biodiversity) will run the National Herbarium.[1] The NHN coordinates several flora projects. "Flora Malesiana" and "Flora of the Guianas" have their seat in Leiden, while the "Flore du Benin" and "Flore du Gabon" are coordinated from Wageningen.[2] Herbaria of several classic botanists are in the collections, e.g.

Access

The Herbarium is open to any visitor, professional or amateur, with a legitimate reason to consult the collections. The specimen database is available through Brahms online: Specimen database.

Directors

When the National Herbarium was formed in 1999 Pieter Baas, former director of the of Leiden University, became the director. He was succeeded in 2005 by .[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Utrecht herbarium . July 20, 2012.
  2. Web site: NHN . February 16, 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130125042043/http://vstbol.leidenuniv.nl/ . January 25, 2013 .
  3. Web site: Marian Tjaden . 'Ik had enorm de pest aan systematiek' . Dutch . Bionieuws . 20 May 2005 . 30 November 2015.