Science
What we do

The museum and research center is at the frontier of biodiversity research and education, from surveying the planet's plants and animals to studying their history, anatomy, behavior, genes, and geography, to predicting environmental events, such as the spread of pests and emerging diseases across the U.S. We lead the nation’s university natural history institutions in biodiversity research grants and in educating graduate students — the next generation of biodiversity scientists.

The Life of the Planet

An interactive video presentation showcasing current research by Biodiversity Institute scientists.

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Supporting this research and education is a research inventory of the world's animals and plants, one of the most comprehensive in the nation — over eight million specimens of mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, insects, invertebrates, plants, and fossils, plus the biological data associated with those specimens.

Collections: A quick profile

 

 

Our scientists are heading an international initiative that uses information technology to harness biodiversity information from three billion specimens of plants and animals in museums worldwide. This vast storehouse of knowledge, the result of 300 years of the biological exploration of the planet, previously lay largely untapped. Today, the information stored with each specimen — when and where it was collected, the habitat in which it lived and other information — combined with geographic and climate data, is a powerful tool for simulating and predicting environmental phenomena that affect life and increasing knowledge to inform conservation and natural resource management.

Visit informatics

 
 

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