Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Plant Details
Meet the Plants
Links
Links to related resources and web sites:
The NTBG Herbarium Database is a searchable reference of over 36,000 herbarium specimens available for loan by the National Tropical Botanical Gardens.
(Visit: http://ntbg.org/herbarium/ )
The Flora of the Marquesas Islands is a joint project initiated by David H. Lorence of the National Tropical Botanical Garden and Warren L. Wagner of the Smithsonian Institution.
(Visit: http://botany.si.edu/pacificislandbiodiversity/marquesasflora/ )
The Flora of the Hawaiian Islands is a project of the Smithsonian Institution to provide an online access to information on Hawaiian flowering plants and ferns.
(Visit: http://botany.si.edu/pacificislandbiodiversity/hawaiianflora/ )
The Hawaiian Ethnobotanical Online Database is a project of the Bishop Museum in Honolulu to provide cultural and scientific information about 145 plants commonly used in traditional Hawaiian culture.
(Visit: http://www2.bishopmuseum.org/ethnobotanydb/index.asp )
The Hawaii Biological Survey (HBS) is an ongoing natural history inventory of the Hawaiian archipelago being conducted by the Bishop Museum .
(Visit: http://hbs.bishopmuseum.org/hbs1.html )
The Virtual Herbarium project of the New York Botanical Garden has online over 800,000 specimens.
(Visit: http://sciweb.nybg.org/science2/VirtualHerbarium.asp )
Program SC – Conservation Biology and Utilisation of the Australian Flora' is a project of the Australian Government's Dentre for Plant Biodiversity Research.
(Visit: http://www.anbg.gov.au/cpbr/program/sc/index.html )

Back to top

 

 

 

 


Choose a Plant

 

Whole Word Search - Taxonomy
(scientific name or common name)

 

  • Users of this search feature should note that common names are often used for more than one plant species.
  • When searching for common names in the Hawaiian language, the name may include okina, each instance represented by an apostrophe (') or glottal stop (`).