Credit: Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria
Today, Royal Botanic Gardens Victoria re-launched its plant biodiversity website, VicFlora. The new portal features upgrades that allow users to identify Victoria's plants more easily. It is based on a new, open-source core that allows Gardens botanists to easily add new usability and accessibility features to continually improve the user experience.
First launched in September 2016, VicFlora provides identification tools and information for all known native and naturalized Victorian plants, with more than 4,400 different plant entries. Today, VicFlora contains more than 33,000 images that document 80% of Victoria's plants—a figure which increases each season. It is the organization's most used scientific resource with 189,000 users and over 2.1M pages of data delivered per year, and 1,600 users per day during the peak flowering season.
As such, VicFlora is one of the most visited sites in Australia for native plant identification. Significant milestones were attained in 2020 and 2021 when Eucalyptus and Acacia "exemplars" were respectively added to the flora. Exemplars are very high-resolution images of perfect reference specimens, in this case covering Victoria's many Eucalyptus and Acacia species, including close-ups of key diagnostic characters needed for identification.
Features at the time of re-launch now available include:
Exciting new features are also in development.
VicFlora continues to be the primary port of call for all those seeking to identify the plants of Victoria, as well as the authoritative reference for natural resource managers and secondary and tertiary students in the natural sciences.