https://bryophyteportal.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=43Botanical Research Institute of TexasConsortium of Bryophyte HerbariaBryophyteConsortium@gmail.comhttps://bryophyteportal.org/portal/index.phpConsortium of Bryophyte HerbariaBryophyteConsortium@gmail.comhttps://bryophyteportal.org/portal/index.php2024-03-28engOver one million plant specimens are housed in the BRIT Herbarium (the combined BRIT-SMU and VDB collections), making this the largest independent herbarium in the southeastern US. The herbarium has strengths in the plants of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, the Gulf Coast, and the southeastern United States. However, these collections are worldwide in scope, and most of the EarthÂ’s plant families are represented here. Two of our current research projects, one in Peru and one in Papua New Guinea, have greatly expanded the scope of our collection of tropical specimens.Botanical Research Institute of Texastrehman@brit.orghttp://www.brit.org/herbariumRehmanTianatrehman@brit.orgDirector of the HerbariumcontentProviderTo the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the 2024-03-28T11:22:45-07:00Consortium of Bryophyte Herbaria - 50e81ba4-8a53-4cf2-984f-2bcea711c940UTF-8Darwin Core Archivehttps://bryophyteportal.org/portal/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=43BRITBotanical Research Institute of Texashttps://bryophyteportal.org/portal/content/collicon/brit.pnghttp://www.brit.org/herbariumhttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/RehmanTianatrehman@brit.orgDirector of the Herbarium<p>Over one million plant specimens are housed in the BRIT Herbarium (the combined BRIT-SMU and VDB collections), making this the largest independent herbarium in the southeastern US. The herbarium has strengths in the plants of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee, the Gulf Coast, and the southeastern United States. However, these collections are worldwide in scope, and most of the EarthÂ’s plant families are represented here. Two of our current research projects, one in Peru and one in Papua New Guinea, have greatly expanded the scope of our collection of tropical specimens.</p>