Science
- Research
- Australian 'Bush Potato'
- Australian freshwater algae
- Australian fungi
- Biology of Myrtaceae
- Botany of Botany Bay
- Cotton Wilt
- Cycas - ancient survivors
- DNA of ground orchids
- DNA studies of Elaeocarpaceae
- DNA studies of Restionaceae
- Ecology of Cumberland Plain Woodland
- Evolution and conservation
- Evolution of Cyperaceae
- Evolution of Proteaceae
- Evolution of Vallisneria
- Floristic Lists of NSW
- Fungal leaf spot on eucalypts
- Fusarium wilt
- Habitat fragmentation
- Lepidoziaceae - southern liverworts
- Marine algae
- NSW Seedbank
- NSW Vegetation Classification & Assessment Project
- Phythophthora in national parks
- Plants, vegetation, landscape, country
- Seed biology
- Seeds for the Future
- She-oaks - tough survivors
- Soilborne plant diseases in Vietnam
- Terrestrial orchids
- Trees of Papua New Guinea
- Wollemi Pine
- NSW Herbarium
- Science staff
- Our resources
- Scientific publications
PlantsThe Botany Bay plant specimensBanks and Solander had certainly collected enthusiastically at Botany Bay. On 3 May Banks reported
A definitive list of the plants collected at Botany Bay in 1770 was never formally published but we have been able to put together a Banks and Solander species list based on material in the British Museum and at the National Herbarium of NSW. We have also compiled plant species for the other places of interest in Botany Bay, based on fieldwork in those areas. To see these go to Species Lists. The Banks and Solander specimens were not all collected at Kurnell. The naturalists made excursions to different parts of Botany Bay and the habitat of some species indicates they were likely to have been collected from the La Perouse side of the Bay, or from the western side. Many of the species collected in 1770 can still be seen growing wild in bushland around the Bay. Some species are still common, but others are now extinct in the area. To see some interesting Botany Bay plants go to
To find our what happened to the original specimens collected by Banks and Solander and their place in botanical science go to
|
Species Lists |
