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<eml:eml xmlns:eml="eml://ecoinformatics.org/eml-2.1.1" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="eml://ecoinformatics.org/eml-2.1.1 http://rs.gbif.org/schema/eml-gbif-profile/1.0.1/eml.xsd" packageId="2c83db99-6978-459c-ba46-a212a04736fc" system="https://symbiota.org" scope="system" xml:lang="eng"><dataset><alternateIdentifier>https://bolus-herbarium.africa/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=1</alternateIdentifier><title xml:lang="eng">Bolus Herbarium</title><creator><organizationName>Bolus Herbarium</organizationName><electronicMailAddress>boluscurator@uct.ac.za</electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>https://bolus-herbarium.africa/index.php</onlineUrl></creator><metadataProvider><organizationName>Bolus Herbarium</organizationName><electronicMailAddress>boluscurator@uct.ac.za</electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>https://bolus-herbarium.africa/index.php</onlineUrl></metadataProvider><pubDate>2026-04-07</pubDate><language>eng</language><abstract><para>The Bolus Herbarium, established in 1865, is the oldest functioning herbarium in South Africa. As part of an academic institution its primary function is to aid in the teaching and research of the diversity of the southern African flora, particularly that of the Cape Floristic Region. Research associated with the herbarium focuses mainly on taxonomy, systematics, biogeography and endemism. With a collection of over 350,000 specimens, it is the third largest herbarium in South Africa and the third largest university Herbarium in the southern Hemisphere. The collection is recognized for its superb representation of the Cape Flora and the large number of type specimens housed.</para></abstract><contact><organizationName>Bolus Herbarium</organizationName><electronicMailAddress>boluscurator@uct.ac.za</electronicMailAddress><onlineUrl>http://www.bolus.uct.ac.za/&#13;
</onlineUrl></contact><associatedParty><individualName><surName>Klak</surName><givenName>Cornelia</givenName></individualName><electronicMailAddress>boluscurator@uct.ac.za</electronicMailAddress><positionName>Curator</positionName><role>contentProvider</role></associatedParty><intellectualRights><para>To the extent possible under law, the publisher has waived all rights to these data and has dedicated them to the <ulink url="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"><citetitle></citetitle></ulink></para></intellectualRights></dataset><additionalMetadata><metadata><symbiota id=""><dateStamp>2026-04-07T21:44:10-07:00</dateStamp><citation identifier="928c3ca1-18ad-4b05-b823-9d03ccbfea81">Bolus Herbarium - 928c3ca1-18ad-4b05-b823-9d03ccbfea81</citation><physical><characterEncoding>UTF-8</characterEncoding><dataFormat><externallyDefinedFormat><formatName>Darwin Core Archive</formatName></externallyDefinedFormat></dataFormat></physical><collection identifier="3c70a0d0-cbc7-4923-a1cd-3b4957489cc9" id="1"><alternateIdentifier>https://bolus-herbarium.africa/collections/misc/collprofiles.php?collid=1</alternateIdentifier><parentCollectionIdentifier>BOL</parentCollectionIdentifier><collectionIdentifier></collectionIdentifier><collectionName>Bolus Herbarium</collectionName><resourceLogoUrl>https://s3-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/pfigshare-u-profiles/9862976/photo.jpg</resourceLogoUrl><onlineUrl>http://www.bolus.uct.ac.za/&#13;
</onlineUrl><intellectualRights>http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</intellectualRights><additionalInfo>University of Cape Town</additionalInfo><associatedParty><individualName><surName>Klak</surName><givenName>Cornelia</givenName></individualName><electronicMailAddress>boluscurator@uct.ac.za</electronicMailAddress><positionName>Curator</positionName></associatedParty><abstract><para>&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 12px; background-color: #ffffff;"&gt;The Bolus Herbarium, established in 1865, is the oldest functioning herbarium in South Africa. As part of an academic institution its primary function is to aid in the teaching and research of the diversity of the southern African flora, particularly that of the Cape Floristic Region. Research associated with the herbarium focuses mainly on taxonomy, systematics, biogeography and endemism. With a collection of over 350,000 specimens, it is the third largest herbarium in South Africa and the third largest university Herbarium in the southern Hemisphere. The collection is recognized for its superb representation of the Cape Flora and the large number of type specimens housed.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</para></abstract></collection></symbiota></metadata></additionalMetadata></eml:eml>
