NYBG 2023 New Species Review!
Every year, botanists describe hundreds of new plants, algae, fungi, and lichens…
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Every year, botanists describe hundreds of new plants, algae, fungi, and lichens…
Cosmopolitan has a long-standing journalistic reputation for getting straight to the heart…
earth /ˈərth/noun1) the planet on which we live; the world2) the substance…
Hot deserts are found on all continents except Antarctica and Europe. In…
The default image that comes to mind when thinking of deserts is…
Our crusty companions play many imperative restoration roles in disturbed habitats, as…
In early March of this year Chicita Culberson, whose work has been…
In this collection are some cyanolichens from the NYBG cryptogamic herbarium, some…
Every year, botanists describe hundreds of new plant, algal, fungal, and lichen…
Dr. Héctor Saul Osorio, born in 1928 in Montevideo, was a Uruguayan…
Noris Salazar-Allen, acclaimed researcher and bryologist, studies the group of non-vascular plants…
Dra. Gabriela Gustava Hässel de Menéndez’s scientific career spanned almost sixty years…
The Caribbean, Central America, and South America have long been geographical focal…
Laura Guzmán-Dávalos’ explorations into the world of fungi are vast and far-reaching,…
Dr. Lidia Itatí Ferraro, born in 1951, is an accomplished Argentine lichenologist.…
Juan Larraín is a self-taught bryologist who focuses on bryophyte diversity in…
Riclef Grolle (1934 – 2004) was among the most dedicated and knowledgeable…
Composed of different species each playing a different role, a lichen can…
Caroline Coventry Haynes (1858-1951) is best known for her significant contributions to…
As scientific perspectives of the Enlightenment movement fostered enthusiasm surrounding the acquisition…
The work and dedication of Elke Mackenzie (1911-1990) is critical to our…
Clara E. Cummings (1855-1906) was a cryptogamic botanist who focused primarily on…
Every year, botanists describe hundreds of new plant, fungal, and lichen species from…
In this most wonderful time of the year, Christmas is naturally on…
Arthonia etymology unknown stevensoniana from Stevenson, honoring Robert Louis Stevenson, author of…
For centuries we have viewed plants and fungi in isolation. Tried to…
Like many of you, NYBG herbarium staff are currently working from home…
What's in a name?Women in Science
For as long as we've been using binomial nomenclature to name species,…
While the illustrations in books by Dr. Seuss depict fanciful folliage, reality…
Usnea is a genus of lichen, commonly known as Old Man’s Beard. …
One million years ago, a volcano broke the surface in the middle…
Cabinet of CuriositiesWhat's in a name?
Don't be too scared by these witches - just some friendly plants…
Lichens are the primary colonizers of new habitat in alpine regions. Unlike…
Herbarium specimens are kept in metal cabinets to protect them from damage.…
Almost everyone can name an endangered charismatic megafauna. But most would be…
Cabinet of CuriositiesSpecimen Stories
In the museum world, there's a sort of joke that you never…
This lichen grows as an epiphyte on trees. They require clean air,…
With 7,800,000 specimens in our herbarium, reaching 4,000,000 specimens catalogued in our…
Specimens contained in the William and Lynda Steere Herbarium represent the endless…
NYBG lichen curator James Lendemer and then-PhD student Jessi Allen named this…
The Wolf Lichen is one of the most showy North American lichens,…
Sometimes collecting the perfect specimen means going places you'd rather not. Here…
Among many of the interesting things Ellen Hutchins collected were collections that…
This Umbilicaria species is regarded to be one of the largest lichens…
Specimen StoriesCabinet of Curiosities
This bright-colored lichen is called the 'Christmas Lichen' because of its bright…
Similar to the Old Man’s Beard, Lungwort lichens can only thrive in…
Specimen StoriesWomen in Science
Some of our herbarium specimens are of incredibly rare species. This is…