Allan Herbarium, Bryophytes (CHR)

The Allan Herbarium located in Christchurch, contains species from around the world but specialises in indigenous and exotic plants of the New Zealand region and the South Pacific. There are over 620 000 specimens in the Allan Herbarium with 5000–8000 being added annually. Two-thirds of the specimens are of indigenous plants with the remainder divided between naturalised, cultivated, and foreign specimens. It also has specialist collections of seed, fruit, wood, plant leaf cuticle, liquid–preserved specimens, and microscope slides. The oldest samples are the 91 duplicate specimens collected by Joseph Banks and Daniel Solander during Captain James Cook's first voyage to New Zealand, 1769–1770. The Allan Herbarium's main function is to collect and record the flora of New Zealand, and to make this information readily available to researchers, and regional and national authorities. The collections are used by systematists to classify and identify species accurately, by ecologists to determine historical distributions of species, by biosecurity managers to identify weeds, and by the general public (including botanical groups) for information on plants in New Zealand.

These data are sourced from the following GBIF dataset: https://www.gbif.org/dataset/df582950-3b58-11dc-8c19-b8a03c50a862

Manager: Ines Schonberger
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 1 February 2024
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File
Usage Rights: CC BY (Attribution)
Collection Statistics
  • 35,058 specimen records
  • 27,906 (80%) georeferenced
  • 418 (1%) with images (498 total images)
  • 14 (0.04%) identified to species
  • 83 families
  • 8 genera
  • 5 species
  • 6 total taxa (including subsp. and var.)
Extra Statistics
Taxon Distribution
Taxon Distribution