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Recent Plant Photos

Below is one of many photographs that have been submitted to the Plant Atlas.

Institute for Systematic Botany

The Institute for Systematic Botany of the Cell Biology, Microbiology, and Molecular Biology Department at the University of South Florida was established in 1990 to promote basic research in plant systematics and to coordinate research, educational and service programs in plant systematics.

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Outside Links

Links to other plant related resources.

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Atlas Tutorial

New! Click the button below to view a tutorial document (PDF format) on the Plant Atlas and how best to use it.

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Atlas Statistics

View some important indices for this Atlas that are kept up-to-date in real-time.

Atlas Statistics
Statistic Value
Number of Plant Species4,284
Number of Plant Images14,603
Number of Specimens Digitized80,334
Number of Native Species2,870
Number of Non-Native Species1,414

About the Plant Atlas

The Atlas of Florida Vascular Plants is a joint effort by the Institute for Systematic Botany, the University of South Florida and the Florida Center for Community Design + Research to provide users with a comprehensive searchable database of vascular plants in the State of Florida.

Florida, with over 4,200 species of native or naturalized ferns and seed plants, is the third most floristically diverse state in the United States. The Atlas of Florida Vascular Plants provides a source of information for the distribution of plants within the state.

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Browse the Plant Atlas By Map

Select a county below to view plant species for that county. Hover over a county to view the county name.

County Selection Map

How to link to the Plant Atlas

The Plant Atlas has been designed to allow external websites to dynamically link to individual species and issue URL-based searches. This method allows you to link to the Atlas without knowing individual unique species identifiers.

  1. Use the following syntax to link to a species page on the Atlas:
    http://www.florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/Results.aspx?q=Genus+species
  2. Search for species within a specific family (and link to family page) using this syntax:
    http://www.florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/Results.aspx?cat=family&text=Orchidaceae
  3. Use the following syntax to search for a specific genus:
    http://www.florida.plantatlas.usf.edu/Results.aspx?cat=genus&text=Abrus

Click here to see examples »