J. K. Small's exploration in Southern Florida, 1915
John Kunkel Small, botanist and herbarium curator at the the New York Botanical…
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John Kunkel Small, botanist and herbarium curator at the the New York Botanical…
John Kunkel Small (1869-1938) was a taxonomist and botanical explorer, who specialized…
Cabinet of CuriositiesFocus on Science
Watch out, these plants are hungry! Most carnivorous plants grow in bogs…
With names like Stinking Benjamin, Corpse Flower, and Skunk Cabbage; these flowers…
With 7,800,000 specimens in our herbarium, reaching 4,000,000 specimens catalogued in our…
It's springtime and the daffodils are blooming outside! In the herbarium, these…
Cabinet of CuriositiesWorks of Art
If we were to give yearbook superlatives to herbarium specimens, these would…
This lichen grows as an epiphyte on trees. They require clean air,…
Cabinet of CuriositiesSpecimen Stories
In the museum world, there's a sort of joke that you never…
The lilacs are blooming here at the Garden, gracing us with their…
When you think of a rare, endangered species, you may think of far-off…
Plants have evolved many ways to protect themselves, from growing barbs that…
Cabinet of CuriositiesFocus on Science
Behold this fern which has the highest recorded chromosome number of any living…
Astragalus osterhoutii M. E. Jones (or Osterhout milkvetch) is an herbaceous plant known…
Specimen StoriesWomen in Science
Tucked away in an office drawer of NYBG’s Fern Curator, Robbin Moran,…
Always a destination for Mother's Day, the Azalea Garden is a spring…
Since its inception NYBG has focused on building an extensive and valuable herbarium…
Almost everyone can name an endangered charismatic megafauna. But most would be…
In the United States, there is no formal regulation for the endangered…
Plants are amazing and can adapt to live in the most unlikely…
The Kauai Digit Fern, or Doryopteris angelica, is a rare fern found in the forest on…
People might pass over these green specimens 'cause they're not standing out…