Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research held several collections of
organisms that are of significant national importance to New Zealand. These holdings are now with the
New Zealand Institute for Bioeconomy Science. Detailed information on all the specimens can be found though the Systematics Collections Data (SCD) website.
International collection of microorganisms from plants The
International Collection of Microorganisms from Plants in Auckland holds live bacterial and
fungal specimens that are preserved under
liquid nitrogen or in
freeze dried ampoules. Currently there are over 20,000 specimens in the collection.
New Zealand Fungarium (PDD) The
New Zealand Fungarium (PDD) Te Kohinga Hekaheka o Aotearoa, located in Auckland, is the major collection of
New Zealand fungi. It contains 109,584 dried
fungal specimens, including all the New Zealand fungal
type species. It is one of the most extensive compilations on the national fungal biota of any country.
New Zealand Arthropod Collection The
New Zealand Arthropod Collection (NZAC) or
Ko te Aitanga Pepeke O Aotearoa in Māori. The NZAC has over 6 million specimens (1 million pinned and 5 million preserved in fluid) and has the most complete coverage of terrestrial
invertebrates of all the collections held in New Zealand. In addition to its fundamental value to the science of taxonomy and systematics, the collection underpins
quarantine and border control decisions (e.g., verifying the presence or absence of species in New Zealand); and contributes to listings of threatened insect species. The NZAC is held at Landcare Research's
Tamaki site.
National Nematode Collection of New Zealand The National Nematode Collection of New Zealand (NNCNZ) contains thousands of
nematode specimens. It is contained within the New Zealand Arthropod Collection.
Allan Herbarium The
Allan Herbarium (CHR) Te Kohinga Tipu o Aotearoa at
Lincoln, contains species from around the world but specialises in plants (
indigenous and
exotic) of the New Zealand region and the Pacific. It also has specialist collections of
seed, fruit, wood, plant leaf
cuticle, liquid-preserved specimens, and
microscope slides. The oldest samples are the 91 duplicate specimens collected by
Banks and
Solander during
Captain Cook's first voyage to New Zealand in 1769–1770. There are currently over 550,000 specimens in the Allan Herbarium with 5,000–8,000 being added annually. Two-thirds of the specimens are of indigenous plants with the remainder divided between naturalised, cultivated, and foreign specimens. It was named for
Harry Allan , to acknowledge his contributions to New Zealand
botany.
National New Zealand Flax Collection Manaaki Whenua is kaitiaki of an ethnobotanical collection of traditional weaving varieties of harakeke (
NZ flax,
Phormium spp.) donated by
Rene Orchiston of Gisborne. The 50 harakeke were selected long ago from natural stands and cultivated by Māori weavers for their special leaf and fibre properties. There are varieties specially suited to making
kete, whariki,
piupiu and cloaks. ==Research==