Founded in 1883, the Charles Maurer Herbarium Collection is a vital regional hub for botanical research. With over 101,000 specimens, the collection plays a key role in advancing research, supporting conservation efforts, and providing valuable educational opportunities for students.
Donations to the Charles Maurer Herbarium are essential in maintaining the herbarium’s long-term sustainability, facilitating the expansion of its specimen collections, and fostering research opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate students. These contributions help ensure that the herbarium continues to be a valuable resource for future generations of researchers, students, and educators. Please consider donating today to help support this valuable resource!
The mission of the Charles Maurer Herbarium Collection at Colorado State University is to facilitate botanical research, teaching, and public service. It is especially concerned with encouraging student success by providing positive research and internship mentorship opportunities, creating and participating in outreach opportunities that increase engagement with the public, providing digitized specimen images and data online, and encouraging collaborations within scientific communities at Colorado State University as well as other professional herbarium users (e.g., Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forests and Pawnee National Grassland, Bureau of Land Management, Colorado Natural Heritage Program, and National Laboratory for Genetic Resource Preservation).
The Charles Maurer Herbarium Collection at Colorado State University will support the College of Natural Science’s “Discovery Begins Here” vision of educating and inspiring the next generation of scholars, researchers, and professional leaders by becoming a prominent center for biodiversity research and citizen science in Colorado. The herbarium will provide external funding for research, continue to document Colorado’s vascular flora, and ultimately benefit the citizens of Colorado and the world by supporting core activities that enhance our understanding of the diversity and distribution of plants in the southern Rocky Mountain region.
As permanent records of the past, the botanical specimens housed at the Charles Maurer Herbarium Collection at Colorado State University provide invaluable and irreplaceable resources for protecting our future and engaging with students, researchers, and citizens in activities that further biodiversity research, resource management, and conservation in the Rocky Mountains.