Botany Specimen Preparation
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Revision as of 16:59, 10 November 2022 by Katie Pearson (Talk | contribs) (Change subheadings and add links to helpful resources)
Contents
Statement of Purpose
These links and documents contain information about botany specimen preparation.
Contributors
Introduction
Botanical specimens can exist in many forms, the most common of which are dried, pressed and mounted on paper or dried and stored in archival packets. Additional preparation types include:
- Alcohol preserved
- Bulk collection
- Cleared and stained (slides)
- Dried tissue (silica or cryo)
- Formalin/FAA preserved
- Live culture
- Lyophilized (freeze-dried)
Botanical specimens should be accompanied by informative labels about the specimen(s) (see Labeling Natural History Collections).
Mounted specimens
The majority of botanical specimens are pressed, dried, and then glued, sewn, or taped to archival paper using archival (acid-free) materials.
Pressing and drying botanical specimens
Mounting botanical specimens
Packets
Smaller or bulkier specimens, such as bryophytes, fungi, and lichens, may be dried and stored in smaller packets of archival paper.