University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin State Herbarium (WIS)

The University of Wisconsin-Madison Herbarium, founded in 1849, is a museum collection of dried, labeled plants of state, national and international importance, which is used extensively for taxonomic and ecological research, as well as for teaching and public service. It contains the world's largest collection of Wisconsin plants, about one-third of its 1,000,000 specimens having been collected within the state. Most of the world's floras are well represented, and the holdings from certain areas, such as the Upper Midwest, eastern North America and western Mexico, are widely recognized as resources of global significance.
Contact: Kenneth M. Cameron (kmcameron@wisc.edu)
Collection Type: Preserved Specimens
Management: Data snapshot of local collection database
Last Update: 15 May 2018
IPT / DwC-A Source:
Digital Metadata: EML File
Collection Statistics
  • 96,245 occurrence
  • 21,253 (22%) georeferenced
  • 95,143 (99%) with images
  • 84,984 (88%) identified to species
  • 35 families
  • 48 genera
  • 1,633 species
  • 2,010 total taxa (including subsp. and var.)
Extra Statistics
Family Distribution
Click on the occurrence record counts within the parenthesis to return the records for that family
  • Acanthaceae (5)
  • Amaranthaceae (1771)
  • Apiaceae (35)
  • Araceae (10)
  • Asteraceae (6880)
  • Balsaminaceae (862)
  • Betulaceae (917)
  • Boraginaceae (581)
  • Brassicaceae (1011)
  • Butomaceae (37)
  • Cabombaceae (36)
  • Caryophyllaceae (19)
  • Chenopodiaceae (3)
  • Cyperaceae (31360)
  • Fabaceae (2216)
  • Haloragaceae (1255)
  • Hydrocharitaceae (622)
  • Iridaceae (912)
  • Juncaceae (6346)
  • Lamiaceae (2172)
  • Lythraceae (486)
  • Marsileaceae (63)
  • Menyanthaceae (37)
  • Onagraceae (2338)
  • Papaveraceae (173)
  • Plantaginaceae (1710)
  • Poaceae (8734)
  • Polygonaceae (8282)
  • Pontederiaceae (69)
  • Potamogetonaceae (5066)
  • Primulaceae (2023)
  • Rhamnaceae (192)
  • Salicaceae (6525)
  • Solanaceae (1663)
  • Typhaceae (1834)