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Moscow University Herbarium

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Moscow University Herbarium (MW) is the second largest herbarium in Russia after the Komarov Institute (LE).[1]

The herbarium is focused on the flora of temperate Eurasia with an emphasis on the flora of Russia.[2] The collections of MW include 1,030,669 specimens (incl. ca. 5K type specimens) [3] (62nd place in the world's ranking) representing 37,100 species and subspecies of vascular plants and 2,223 species and subspecies of bryophytes. MW holds some important historical collections by G.F. Hoffmann, J.F. Ehrhart, C.B. Trinius, J.R. and J.G.A. Forsters, etc.[4]

The Moscow University Herbarium added a millionth specimen to the collections in June 2016.[1] An average annual growth of the collection in 2005–2016 was 15,100 specimens, with an exceptional 22,013 specimens added to the herbarium in 2016.[1] Since 2005, major accessions originated from Eastern Europe, Siberia and Russian Far East, the Caucasus, and South Asia (vascular plants); Taimyr, Russian Far East, and North Caucasus (bryophytes).

The Moscow University Herbarium has gained budget for the digitisation of collections within the Program of the National Depository Bank of Live Systems, and around 911,000 specimens (89%) were scanned since May 2015. All these records are published already online,[5] including JPG images and metadata required for indexing.[6]

Currently, the Moscow Digital Herbarium holds the largest digitised herbarium collections from Russia, Ukraine, Mongolia, Georgia, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Moldova, Latvia, as well as from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan. Also, Moscow Digital Herbarium is the second largest hub of digitised herbarium collections from Armenia, Lithuania, North Korea, Mali and the third largest for Cyprus and Vietnam.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Seregin, Alexey (2021). "Moscow University Herbarium (MW)". Lomonosov Moscow State University. doi:10.15468/cpnhcc. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ Seregin, Alexey P. (2018). "The Largest Digital Herbarium in Russia Is Now Available Online!". Taxon. 67 (2): 465–467. doi:10.12705/672.34. ISSN 1996-8175.
  3. ^ "Herbarium Details - The William & Lynda Steere Herbarium". sweetgum.nybg.org. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  4. ^ "Herbarium G.F. Hoffmann (1761-1826)". Brill. 1999-01-01. ISBN 9789004198272.
  5. ^ "Национальный банк-депозитарий живых систем". plant.depo.msu.ru. Moscow State University. Retrieved 15 October 2017.
  6. ^ "ГЕРБАРИЙ МОСКОВСКОГО УНИВЕРСИТЕТА (MW) СЕГОДНЯ: ФОНДЫ, ОНЛАЙН ДОСТУП И НАУЧНАЯ РАБОТА", elibrary.ru, retrieved 15 October 2017