Kew's Collections go digital

Taking Kew's Herbarium and Fungarium online for everyone across the globe to access.

Person holding scanner to barcode herbarium specimen.

***Click here to see opportunites to get involved with this project***

Kew is embarking on one of the biggest projects in its history with the launch of this multimillion pound project to digitise its entire collection of more than eight million plant and fungal specimens.

These collections are a reference resource for biodiversity and conservation research, telling us what plant and fungal material was found where, when, and by whom. Preserved specimens can be analysed anatomically, genetically, and chemically, but at present they can only be accessed by visiting Kew.

The aim of Kew's Digitisation Project is to transform our Science Collections into a global online resource by digitising all 7 million Herbarium and 1.25 million Fungarium specimens, enabling some of the most critical challenges facing humanity, such as climate change and habitat degradation, to be addressed.

This will involve digitising the specimens and creating a portal to provide external access to these specimens.

Integrating our digital collections with ICMS Earthcape

For the first time, we have a place that can host and enable cross collection conversations digitally: our integrated collections management system (ICMS) provided by Earthcape Oy. Watch our new video to find out more about the programme.

Taking our collections online for all to access

We've also released our new Data Portal so that anyone anywhere in the world can access our digitised collections for free.

Progress to-date

The project is on track to deliver a digital open access resource of 7 million preserved specimens and 1.25 million fungi by March 2026. This mid-point review details progress to date, future plans, and funding requirements.

Get involved

Are you keen to get involved with our project to digitise our entire herbarium and fungarium collection? See volunteering and job opportunities plus the chance to donate to help immortalise a part of botanical history on our dedicated Digitisation Project webpage.

    A drawing of Charles Darwin surrounded by herbarium specimens
    5 December 2023

    Unearthing the untold stories behind Darwin’s specimens that shaped evolution

    Ben Hirschler , Edie Burns
    Herbarium specimens sit to the side of a diagram of a brain
    24 July 2023

    How AI is revealing nature’s secrets by supercharging species identification

    Dr Isabel Larridon, Paul Figg
    Mountain range view with sun rising in the background, illuminating the entire scenery or vegetation-covered ground.
    13 January 2023

    5 ways digitising Kew’s specimens can help save the world

    Paul Figg, Ben Hirschler

Paul Kersey – Project Senior Responsible Owner

Alan Paton – Project Deputy Senior Responsible Owner

Sarah Phillips – Research Leader Digital Collections

Marie-Hélène Weech - Lead Digitisation Operations Manager

John Adcock - Programme Manager

Helen Hardy, Natural History Museum

Erik Smets, Naturalis Biodiversity Center

Earthcape Oy

Max Communications 

The digitisation of our collections and the online portal have been part-funded by the Department for Environment Food & Rural Affairs (Defra) and the first Chairman of Kew’s Board of Trustees, Lord John Eccles.